are becoming ill as clean water and medical supplies are running out. steve mcandrew joins me now from jakarta he s the head of emergency operations for the international federation of red cross and red crescent societies welcome steve could you describe for us what you and your teams have been seeing in the area hit by the tsunami what conditions then why well conditions there still remain difficult there s over one hundred fifty people still missing we still have multiple search and rescue teams and first state teams working round the clock looking for the people that are missing the there is rubble and debris still in the area but at the same time things are getting better so every hour to conditions get better there s a large governmental response that s clearly no roads and the debris so the access is improving so things are getting better but it s still
from jakarta he s the head of emergency operations for the international federation of red cross and red crescent societies welcome steve could you describe for us what you and your teams have been seeing in the area hit by the tsunami what conditions then. well conditions there still remain difficult there s over one hundred fifty people still missing we still have multiple search and rescue teams and first a teams working round the clock looking for the people that are missing the there is rubble and debris still in the area but at the same time things are getting better so every hour to conditions get better there s a large governmental response that s clearly no roads and the debris so the access is improving so things are getting better but it s still a full out emergency response operation and we re still going really hard at this
thank you so much and take care, jena. the mayor is urging people like her on the fence, andrea, about leaving or staying to heed the evacuation warnings and leave and don t take the storm lightly. andrea. well, exactly right, and don t wait for the bridge to be out before you make a decision, and don t call 911 if you need help. gabe guterres is in south carolina with the mayor of georgetown with preparations. and gabe, the message from down there is don t hang back and see how high the winds are going to get, and get out when to getting is good. yeah, that is right, andrea. here in georgetown, south carolina, here in myrtle beach what they expect is a lot of rain. this is an area that typically floods and we are here at the national guard armory where they are staging all of the high water vehicles that they expect to the use shortly after the storm. this is an area hit hard by the 100-year flood back in 2015 and again, they expect a lot of damage from the heavy rains, and
down. the animals of ms-13 made clear their goal is kill, rape, control. the gang is said to have more than 10,000 members spreading violence and suffering. president trump s entire administration is working to bring these violent animals to justice. we re live in smithtown, new york in long island. an area hit hard by that gang. a lot of innocent high school students have been murdered in cold blood by those people. hi, brian. look, it s worth noting the president first called ms-13 gang members animals in a speech on long island last july. last week the president did it again at an immigration round table and democrats and immigration activists, he received criticism for that. some interpreted it as to mean he was calling immigrants animals. some said it was racist. others called it dehumanizing.
enforcement agency with less people seeing broader view of their community and be able to report that back down when they see something that needs to be addressed. reporter: of course, the guard is known for helping out locals in times of disaster. they say this opioid crisis, sandra, is in fact a disaster. sandra: why is that area hit so hard by this epidemic? reporter: well, people point to the decline of the coal industry and the lack of good jobs and the proximity to major interstates and rail lines. also the available of pills and narcotics. huntington has been called the capital, the overdose capital of america. west virginia, twice the national average for overdoses. this city was the subject of an oscar nominated documentary heroin. there were 26 overdoses here on one day in august 2016. that s just two days ago, cops busted a guy an recovered 30 grams of fentanly, $86,000 on