November 1 2012 at 10:43pm
By Tim Witcher and Sara Hussein
By Tim Witcher and Sara Hussein
Reuters
A commuter looks out from a subway
train as he waits for it to depart from the station in the Brooklyn Borough of
New York on Thursday. New Yorkers heard the rumble of subway trains for the
first time in four days as limited service resumed.
New York - The toll of death and
suffering from superstorm Sandy mounted on Thursday even as New York struggled
back to life, with the first subway trains rolling in four days.
New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg
said Sandy killed at least 37 people in the city and the number was likely to
mount. At least 85 people have now been reported dead across the 15 states hit
by the hurricane on Monday night.
Fuel shortages led to long lines of
cars at filling stations in many states and the country faced a storm bill of
tens of billions of dollars.
More bodies are being found as
police and firefighters continue “their lifesaving mission, going
block-by-block and door-to-door in the areas devastated by the hurricane”,
Bloomberg said.
With about 650 000 people still
without power in New York, Bloomberg said the city would start handing out food
and water and that National Guard and police would go into high-rise buildings
to help the elderly.
The Con-Edison power company said
that some New Yorkers would have to wait until November 11 before electricity
is restored.
National Guard troops helped rescue
people trapped in flooded homes across the Hudson River from New York in
Hoboken. They had rescued 2 000 people in New Jersey in two days, Defence
Department spokesperson George Little said.
Hoboken authorities estimated on
Wednesday that 20 000 people were stuck in their homes and high-wheel military
trucks were brought in to reach stricken houses and apartment blocks.
The floodwaters receded slowly,
leaving behind desolation. A yacht, thrown up by the storm, blocked one street
near the Hoboken ferry terminal.
New Jersey, which President Barack
Obama visited on Wednesday, emerged as the state with the most widespread
destruction.
At least 12 people were reported
dead in the state, and many isolated districts were still being searched.
Some 1.8 million people in New
Jersey were still without electricity three days after the storm and fuel
shortages were becoming critical, with huge queues of cars at the rare gas
stations open in the state.
About half of gas stations in New
Jersey and the New York region had closed down because of power cuts or fuel
shortages, officials said.
But the first subway trains brought
some cheer to New York City.
A skeleton service started just
before dawn and trains were quickly packed. Trains were to be free on Thursday
and Friday. “It is not comfortable, but it is a huge relief to get moving
again,” said commuter Dave Stetman.
On Wednesday, in a bid to avoid
gridlock, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said that until Friday cars entering
Manhattan must carry at least three people. Police set up checkpoints at
bridges and turned back hundreds of cars.
Con Edison said that more than 200
000 Manhattan customers blacked out by an explosion at a sub-station would have
power by Saturday morning.
But it said 100 000 cases of trees
and other objects bringing down power lines had been reported, so full
city-wide electricity restoration would take until November 11.
Some heartbreaking stories have
emerged from the storm.
Two brothers, aged two and four,
were swept from their mother's arms in the floods as the family tried to escape
the rising seas in Staten Island in the New York suburbs.
Glenda Moore's car became stuck in
the water and she was carrying the boys to seek help when they were swept away,
the New York Post said. Police said they were still looking for the boys,
Connor aged four and Brandon aged two.
Others victims were electrocuted or
drowned in flooded basements. A growing number of people were killed by
poisoning from the fumes given off by diesel generators put into use since the
storm.
The Shell oil company said that
Sandy triggered an oil spill in the waters off New York and said clean-up
efforts were under way.
The US Coast Guard, which is
overseeing the clean-up campaign, said refinery operator Motiva had estimated
up to 300 000 gallons of diesel fuel had leaked from the plant at Sewaren, New
Jersey.
Hurricane Sandy brought devastation
throughout the Caribbean before hitting the United States and Canada. The
overall death is now at least 157. - Sapa-AFP
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