36 hours,” he told reporters at the Maryland emergency co-ordination headquarters.
“This is going to be a long haul,” he said.
“The days ahead are going to be difficult. There will be people who die and are killed in this storm.”
O’Malley warned of “very high winds” by early yesterday afternoon, lengthy power outages in the afternoon and evening, and severe flooding in the countless rivers and streams that feed into the Chesapeake Bay.
He urged motorists to stay off the roads until today night.
Ocean City, on Maryland’s easternmost Atlantic coast, was already being lashed by a combination of wind, rain and “very heavy surf,” with the resort town’s pier sustaining heavy damage, the governor said.
The mandatory evacuation of downtown Ocean City had been completed, he said, and “there are few if any residents left in the town.”
While the potential for loss of life was “my biggest concern right now,” O’Malley said several days’ warning had given Maryland time to prepare for Sandy’s wrath, with help from reinforcements from other states.
Twenty-three emergency shelters have opened around Maryland for those most in need, he said, but others should “hunker down” and remain indoors with their families until the “monster storm” passes.
“There will undoubtedly be some deaths that are caused by the intensity of the storm by the floods by the tidal surge and by the waves. The more responsibly citizens act, the fewer people will die.” — AFP.
First Lady, Princess Dana champion heritage for climate action
Blessings Chidakwa in ISTANBUL, Türkiye Her Royal Highness Princess Dana Firas of Jordan paid a courtesy call on First Lady Dr Auxillia Mnangagwa in Istanbul on the sidelines of the…



