Rio Guadalupe region, in the US state, was taken by a strong full on Friday (4). Teams search with the support of helicopters. Flood leaves dead and missing in Texas, in the US at least 24 people died in storms caused by storms in the state of Texas in the United States. Rescue teams search for dozens of missing, including a group of 23 girls who were in a summer camp. Family members shared desperate messages on social networks in search of information about the whereabouts of girls. They were at Camp Mystic, a Christian camp. The place, on the banks of the Guadalupe River, was taken by a strong strong, after a storm pouring almost 30 centimeters of rain within hours on Friday (4). Videos published on social networks show houses and trees dragged by the sudden flood in the region. A rescue operation with helicopters, drones and emergency teams will continue during the weekend. “I ask the people of Texas to pray,” said State Deputy Governor Dan Patrick. “Of those to kneel, so we can find these girls.” Aerial view made by drone shows flooded homes after torrential rainfall that caused sudden floods along the Guadalupe River in San Angelo, Texas, on July 4, 2025 Reuters Rescues by Texas Forest Guards helicopter reported on Friday afternoon that they had arrived at Camp Mystic and began evacuating camper who were in higher areas. Elinor Lester, 13, said he was removed from helicopter with his cabin colleagues after crossing the flood water. She said she woke up scared around 1:30 am on Friday, with thunder and heavy rain beating the cabin’s windows. “The camp was completely destroyed. It was very scary,” said Elinor. Elinor was among the oldest campers who were in the high area known as Senior Hill. The youngest girls’ huts, who can start attending camp from 8 years old, are on the banks of the river and were the first to flood, she said. The children who were in the lower huts climbed the hill to shelter. In the morning, they were without food, electricity or drinking water, reported the young woman. When the rescuers arrived, they tied a rope for the girls to cross a bridge with the water hitting their legs. Elinor’s mother, Elizabeth Lester, said that her other son was also in a nearby camp, Camp La Junta, and managed to escape. According to her report, a monitor woke up with the water climbing inside the cabin, opened a window and helped the boys swim out. Camp La Junta and another camp in the region, Camp Waldemar, reported on Instagram that all campers and employees were safe. Elizabeth cried when she rediscover her daughter, who held a teddy bear and a book. She said that the daughter of a friend, who was the younger children’s monitor at Camp Mystic, is among the missing. “My children are safe, but knowing that other people are still missing is destroying me inside,” he said. At Ingram Primary School, which was transformed into a meeting center, families clustered in an attempt to find their children again. A girl with a white t -shirt from Camp Mystic was seen standing in a puddle with wet socks, crying in her mother’s arms. Chloe Crane, teacher and former camp of the camp, said she was devastated. “Mystic is a very special place, and I can’t imagine the terror that would be to go through it as a monitor, responsible for 15 small girls.” Founded in 1926, Camp Mystic is considered a safe and formative space for girls to develop self -confidence and independence. The flood transformed the centenary refuge into a scenario of destruction. ‘Until everyone appears’ Texas governor, Greg Abbott, released a video on network X in which a victim is rescued from the top of a tree by a suspended rescuer of a helicopter while the waters roar below. “Air rescue missions like this are being held 24 hours a day. We will not stop until everyone appears,” he said. Freeman Martin, director of Texas’s Public Security Department, said the flood left “many victims.” About 500 rescuers and 14 helicopters were mobilized to the region. Texas National Guard has sent rescue teams and the United States Coastal Guard collaborates in operations. “The rain has decreased, but we know that more is to come,” Martin warned. “We have floods constantly. This is the most dangerous river valley in the United States.” But “there was no evidence that it would be something like what happened here,” said Kerr County Judge Rob Kelly. According to the United States National Ocean and Atmospheric Agency (NOAA), the water level of the Guadalupe river rose during the night from two to nine meters after the rains. The weather service issued a flood alert to the south-central of Kerr County and asked residents to avoid traveling and look for higher areas. *With information from Associated Press and Reuters Videos on the rise in G1 Videos: More Assisted from G1
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Floods in Texas: teams look for 23 girls who disappeared in camp; More than 20 people died
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