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Deadly storms track across U.S. South, triggering tornados

Eleven people were killed in Georgia as severe storms tracked across the state, media outlets reported on Sunday, bringing the death toll from a dangerous weekend weather system to at least 16.

Eleven people were killed in Georgia as severe storms tracked across the state, media outlets reported on Sunday, bringing the death toll from a dangerous weekend weather system to at least 16.

Storms sweeping through southwest Georgia overnight left 11 people dead and 23 injured, WXIA-TV in Atlanta reported, citing the Georgia Emergency Management Agency. Reuters could not immediately confirm the figures.

In Mississippi, a predawn tornado on Saturday killed four people and caused widespread property damage.

The dangerous system prompted U.S. weather forecasters to issue a rare, "high risk" warning of severe storms threatening parts of southern Georgia, north Florida and Alabama on Sunday.

The last time the National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Oklahoma issued its highest risk warning for tornados was April 2014, lead forecaster Rich Thompson said in a telephone interview.

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"These could be the kind of tornados you don't want to mess with," he said. "These could be fast-moving, kind of long-lived and could produce substantial damage if they encounter anything."

He said 34 possible tornados had been reported in the past two days in a region stretching from the far eastern border of Texas, near the Louisiana state line, to Georgia.

Forecasters expected the hazards from the storm system would increase into the afternoon and continue through the evening.

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