candles out and distributed. factory owner says 8 are are dead or missing. fema is calling it a rescue effort not a recovery effort yet. they followed protocol got the majority into the bathroom because there aren t any windows in there and concrete walls so they could be safe. steve: one of the people killed was a jail deputy. a number of the people who work at the candle factory, they were doing a work release program there. and they had actual prisoners inmates. the program was designed to help them get a fresh start on life after jail. the deputy who was killed, a fellow by the name of robert daniel, one of the inmates, a fellow by the name of francisco starks was injured in that. he survived and then they took him to a regional medical center jackson purchase and they said okay, you are better, you can leave so they released him and now the inmate was last seen outside the hospital. they are looking for that guy.
after. it s virtually unrecognizable. everything was destroyed. we know the candle factory owner says he s eager to rebuild and state there and prove that be kentuckians can come back and they will come back. how do you feel about that? i believe that we re strong. i believe that we have a strong community. it very apparent that everybody is coming together to help each other out. for rebuilding, i think it a beautiful idea. we ve been told they re starting a new building. either way, i look forward going back to work. i love my job and i love the people that i work with. neil: how is your extended family holding up and you?
hour interview with a factory owner. if you knew the weather was coming was there any thought to maybe suspending production? there are signs of hope. two workers found alive there. but the reality in so many towns across this state is unbearable. we ll have over a thousand homes that are just gone. we speak with the governor, coordinating the response. every person we locate that we thought was lost is a miracle. tonight the search for survivors and for answers. and how will so many rebuild after so much destruction? there are tears but there are also hugs and words of comfort from each other. this is nbc nightly news with kate snow. reporting tonight from mayfield, kentucky. good evening. it has now been almost 48 hours since the string of tornadoes tore across the middle
the global supply chain crunch creating shortages and higher prices for most things. including toys. factories here in southern china make more than 80% of imported toys on store shelves in the u.s. from digital stuff to dolls to dinosaurs. but here is also where the world supply chain problems began. there are more challenges this year, says this man, who owns a trading company. raw materials are costing more. micro chips are hard to find. our power crisis means electricity is being rationed. the impact is actually big to us, says this factory owner. and the pandemic pushed shipping rates through the roof with no guarantee of timely delivery. everything is taking longer. toys that would typically need just a few weeks to reach stores in the u.s. now taking nearly three months. like these shipments of e-blocks to get from the factory in
stay with us on bbc news. we are going to cross the atlantic to look at that same problem in the supply chain, this time through the eyes of a factory owner in illinois. and we will get the view of the executive port manager in long beach, california, one of the biggest container ports in america. a british woman who took her children with her when she joined the islamic state group says the uk government should deal with the issue of allowing them to return. nicole jack is being held with her three daughters in the same syrian refugee camp as shamima begum, whose british citizenship has been revoked. 0ur correspondent poonam taneja has this exclusive report. this is no place for children to live. but thousands do. this squalid camp in northern syria houses the surviving children of islamic state group s fallen caliphate. shall i fix your slipper?