-
The 'ordinary' Arnie? Glen Powell reboots 'The Running Man'
-
Typhoon exposes centuries-old shipwreck off Vietnam port
-
French court to decide if ex-president Sarkozy can leave jail
-
China lifts sanctions on US units of South Korea ship giant Hanwha
-
Japan death row inmate's sister still fighting, even after release
-
Taylor sparks Colts to Berlin win as Pats streak hits seven
-
Dreyer, Pellegrino lift San Diego to 4-0 MLS Cup playoff win over Portland
-
Indonesia names late dictator Suharto a national hero
-
Fourth New Zealand-West Indies T20 washed out
-
Tanzania Maasai fear VW 'greenwashing' carbon credit scheme
-
Chinese businesswoman faces jail after huge UK crypto seizure
-
Markets boosted by hopes for deal to end US shutdown
-
Amazon poised to host toughest climate talks in years
-
Ex-jihadist Syrian president due at White House for landmark talks
-
Saudi belly dancers break taboos behind closed doors
-
The AI revolution has a power problem
-
Big lips and botox: In Trump's world, fashion and makeup get political
-
NBA champion Thunder rally to down Grizzlies
-
US senators reach deal that could end record shutdown
-
Weakening Typhoon Fung-wong exits Philippines after displacing 1.4 million
-
Lenny Wilkens, Basketball Hall of Famer as player and coach, dies
-
Sir Dave Lewis Appointed Diageo plc CEO
-
Griffin wins PGA Mexico title for third victory of the year
-
NFL makes successful return to Berlin, 35 years on
-
Lewandowski hat-trick helps Barca punish Real Madrid slip
-
George warns England against being overawed by the All Blacks
-
Lewandowski treble helps Barca beat Celta, cut gap on Real Madrid
-
Neves late show sends PSG top of Ligue 1, Strasbourg down Lille
-
Inter go top of Serie A after Napoli slip-up
-
Bezos's Blue Origin postpones rocket launch over weather
-
Hamilton upbeat despite 'nightmare' at Ferrari
-
Taylor sparks Colts to Berlin win, Pats win streak hits seven
-
Alcaraz and Zverev make winning starts at ATP Finals
-
Protests suspend opening of Nigeria heritage museum
-
Undav brace sends Stuttgart fourth, Frankfurt win late in Bundesliga
-
Roma capitalise on Napoli slip-up to claim Serie A lead
-
Liverpool up for the fight despite Man City masterclass, says Van Dijk
-
Two MLB pitchers indicted on manipulating bets on pitches
-
Wales rugby captain Morgan set to be sidelined by shoulder injury
-
After storming Sao Paulo podium, 'proud' Verstappen aims to keep fighting
-
US flights could 'slow to a trickle' as shutdown bites: transport secretary
-
Celtic close on stumbling Scottish leaders Hearts
-
BBC chief resigns after row over Trump documentary
-
Norris extends title lead in Sao Paulo, Verstappen third from pit-lane
-
Norris wins in Sao Paulo to extend title lead over Piastri
-
Man City rout Liverpool to mark Guardiola milestone, Forest boost survival bid
-
Man City crush Liverpool to mark Guardiola's 1,000 match
-
Emegha fires Strasbourg past Lille in Ligue 1
-
Howe takes blame for Newcastle's travel sickness
-
Pumas maul Wales as Tandy's first game in charge ends in defeat
A 'forgotten' valley in storm-hit North Carolina, desperate for help
The only road to Pensacola, in the remote mountains of western North Carolina, is now a muddy path through deep, twisting gorges. Its main bridges were swept away last week in floods fueled by devastating Hurricane Helene -- and a cold winter is coming.
"Every major bridge into town is completely gone," Christy Edwards, a resident of the valley, told AFP. She was speaking near the site of her former craft shop -- carried away by the fast-moving floodwaters.
The isolation of this steep-sided valley, where Edwards was born and has spent her life, speaks of the utter ruination inflicted by Helene on some of the more secluded corners of the southeastern United States.
Even a week after the powerful storm's passage, access to the area is only slowly being restored.
But "winter is coming," said Edwards, a former teacher, and at an altitude of some 3,000 feet (900 meters), time is running short.
Temperatures are expected to drop sharply next week, and "these people and these homes have no heat source other than power, (though) some of them do have wood-burning stoves."
- 'We're devastated' -
Not far away, past the jumbled mass of tangled tree limbs and rocks that Helene left strewn across her yard, the local fire station has become a beehive of activity, with free food, friendly faces, and a generator providing light and comfort to huddled residents.
Janet Musselwhite, in her 60s, has come with friend Randi to try to use the station's satellite internet link to contact relatives.
"We're devastated," she said. "We don't have electricity. Most people don't have water. We have no cell service. We have very little communication. It's really hard to even get to town."
The only road into the valley is impassable except in a four-by-four -- and even that is risky.
- Swept away by mud -
The storm claimed at least one life in the Pensacola area, that of a woman who, according to her neighbor, was swept away in one of the dozens of mudslides that carved paths of desolation on area slopes early the morning of September 27.
Helene has claimed at least 220 lives overall, making it the second most deadly storm to strike the US in more than a half-century, behind 2005's Hurricane Katrina.
Scientists say Helene's rare intensity was almost certainly amplified by the warming of the seas caused by climate change.
But the mountains of western North Carolina normally escape the worst of passing hurricanes, which tend to inflict their greatest damage in low-lying coastal areas.
No one in this area had ever seen anything like this.
At the fire station, David Rogers, a bearded military veteran in a gray T-shirt, showed videos on his phone of the floods that carried away the mobile homes once parked just below his house. Their inhabitants escaped, but "three had to go to the hospital."
Mobile homes are fragile dwellings, highly vulnerable to nature's extremes, and their presence bespeaks the deep poverty of rural settings like this across the US.
Rogers said he and the survivors from the mobile homes were completely cut off from the outside world for three days.
- 'It's messy' -
Rescue teams finally arrived, and behind them, a steady stream of backhoes and bulldozers.
Work crews have been struggling from dusk to dawn to reopen roads that were left under mountains of mud and broken chunks of asphalt by the power of fast-flowing water. One man drives by on a noisy four-wheeler with rolls of paper towels tied to the back.
Amid all the din and the clamor, the authorities are maintaining a quiet presence.
Near the fire station, across from a huge camper lying on its side against a white church, Shawn Lavin, a national guardsman from New York, is part of a dozen-member team helping out.
Their chief, who declined to give his name, said that between the official relief teams, the locals, and volunteers come from far away -- some even arriving in their own helicopters -- "it's messy."
For many residents, the federal presence arrived too late, and the process of applying for emergency assistance through the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is too complicated, requiring computer access.
"These people don't even have a computer, they don't have power," said Christy Edwards, who said she felt "forgotten."
"We need physical people here to walk up to each individual house and say, 'How can we help you?'"
In this remote corner of the Appalachian mountains, people have "always felt forgotten because we are in a rural area," she said.
"We have never asked for help. But this is way bigger than our resources here. We have to have help from our government to fix back."
A.Jones--AMWN