By Ians
Houston, July 5: At least 13 people were killed and more than 20 children from summer camps along the Guadalupe River went missing during the major flash flooding caused by heavy rain overnight in central Texas, authorities updated. There are currently “about 23” kids unaccounted for at Camp Mystic, a private Christian summer camp for girls, Texas Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick told a news conference on Friday. The camp hosts about 750 children, Xinhua news agency reported. He said at least 14 helicopters, 12 drones and more than 500 people are searching around the camp, and multiple adults and children have been rescued from trees nearby. Florida Floods Videos: Extreme Flooding in Miami and Other Parts of Florida Following Incessant Rainfall, Flash Flood Emergency Declared. Flash Flood in Texas BREAKING: 20 children are missing in the Texas Hill Country flash flood. Praying for the best. This is not a time to be defunding weather research and NOAA. pic.twitter.com/VpUpnAylKk 鈥 Brian Krassenstein (@krassenstein) July 4, 2025 Catastrophic flooding in Kerr County, Texas has left 13 people dead and 23 girls missing from Camp Mystic. The Guadalupe River rose about 9 meters after 18 cm of rain. 500 rescuers and 40 helicopters deployed. A once-in-a-lifetime disaster. #Texas #flood #kerrville #alert #usa pic.twitter.com/3ZJFo0u2b0 鈥 WeatherUpdateEU (@WeatherUpdateEU) July 4, 2025 Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leitha told a news conference that at least 13 people died in the county due to the severe flooding and several people remain unaccounted for. Leitha said he expects more fatalities will be reported in the county. “We are still actively trying to find those that are out and those that are needing assistance,” Kerrville City Manager Dalton Rice said. At about 4 a.m. local time (0900 GMT), the National Weather Service upgraded its flash flood warning, which allows wireless emergency alerts to be sent to cell phones for residents and campers along the river, NBC News reported. Bomb Cyclone in California: Intense Rain, Flash Flood Warnings Issued As Powerful Storm Threatens Northern California and Pacific Northwest. The service also warned that a “large and deadly flood wave” was moving down the Guadalupe River. The Guadalupe River in Kerr County rose from 7.5 feet (about 2.3 metres) to nearly 30 feet overnight and is expected to crest at 34 feet in Spring Branch on Friday afternoon, said the service. Cars, campers and mobile homes were swept away as the section of the Guadalupe River surged in the county, online videos showed. Texas Governor Greg Abbott said on X that the state is “surging all available resources” to respond to the flooding. “The immediate priority is saving lives,” the governor said. Over half a million people in central Texas were under flash flood warnings as of Friday afternoon.