INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Hundreds of rescuers have been deployed to search for people missing in central Texas, after flash floods killed 51 people, including 15
children.The worst affected area is Kerr County where 43 people have died and where 27 children remain missing from a Christian youth camp
Kerr County.People have also been confirmed dead in other parts of the state, including Travis County and Tom Green County.Multiple flash
flood warnings remain in place over the weekend in central Texas.About 850 people have been rescued so far.At a news conference on Saturday
afternoon, Texas Governor Greg Abbott said he had signed an expanded disaster declaration to boost search efforts.He said officials would be
Guadalupe River to try to find people who may have been swept away by the floods.US President Donald Trump said his administration was
working closely with local authorities to respond to the emergency.Forecasters have warned that central Texas may see more flooding this
weekend.The National Weather Service (NWS) said the area could see 2 to 5in (5cm to 12cm) of rain on Saturday.Up to 10in of rain was
belongings caked in mud.Many were asleep when the river rose more than 26ft (8m) in less than an hour in the early hours of Friday.In an
email to parents of the roughly 750 campers, Camp Mystic said that if they had not been contacted directly, their child had been accounted
for.More details of those who died have started to emerge - some were as young as eight
It has also been confirmed sisters Blair and Brooke Harber, who were 13 and 11, are among the dead.A special Mass will be held at Notre Dame
Catholic Church on Sunday for those who died or are missing, and their families.Scores of campers holidaying during the Independence Day
where only the foundation remained.They told the BBC that the mother and a baby of the family remained missing
A teenage son, Leo, survived after he became snared in barbed wire.Another resident, Anthony, found his apartment full of mud and debris