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At least 2 killed in Alabama as severe storms and tornadoes sweep across the South

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At least 2 killed in Alabama as severe storms and tornadoes sweep across the South

A steeple was blown off a church in the community of Steens, Mississippi, after a strong storm moved through the area Tuesday.

Severe storms and tornadoes ripped through parts of the South from Tuesday into Wednesday morning, killing at least two people in Alabama and damaging homes and other buildings in at least three states, officials said.

A tornado threat remains in the region through Wednesday morning, forecasters say.

Two people were killed and at least one other was injured when a tornado hit Wednesday morning in the Flatwood area near Alabama's capital, Montgomery County Emergency Management Director Christina Thornton told CNN.

"Thanks to the heroic efforts of our first responders many other lives were saved. We pray for our community as we mourn this tragic loss of lives," Thornton said.

At least 30 tornado reports have been made since Tuesday afternoon, mostly in central and southern Mississippi and Alabama, as well as in Louisiana, the Storm Prediction Center said.

Storm damage includes:

• Alabama: Tornadoes early Wednesday were believed to have damaged homes not just where two people died in the Flatwood area near Montgomery, but also in the western and southwestern parts of the state, according to early reports made to the National Weather Service.

An apartment complex was torn apart late Tuesday near Eutaw in Greene County, with a roof torn off and fallen walls exposing residents' rooms, video from CNN affiliate WBMA showed. The damage, preliminarily attributed to a tornado, left some displaced residents taking shelter at a middle school, WBMA reported.

In nearby Hale County, many trees and some homes were damaged in the small town of Akron. One fallen tree rested on a home's roof, images from WBMA and CNN affiliate WVTM showed. No injuries were immediately reported in Akron, county emergency management Director Russell Weeden said.

In Sumiton just outside Birmingham, a commercial building's roof was blown off and struck a house, city officials there said.

Track storms as they develop >>

• Mississippi: In Lowndes County east of Starkville, a tree had fallen through the middle of a trailer home, a CNN crew there saw Wednesday morning.

Volunteer firefighters helped some people who found themselves trapped in damaged buildings, Lowndes County Fire Coordinator Neil Austin said.

"We were successful in getting (to) some people that had to hunker down in their homes that were messed up," Austin told CNN on Wednesday.

In the same county, a church's steeple was blown off and a grocery store was damaged in the community of Steens on Tuesday evening, Cindy Lawrence, the county's head of emergency management, told CNN. No deaths or injuries were reported in the county, Austin said.

Mississippi State University in Starkville briefly asked students to seek shelter during a tornado warning Tuesday night. Earlier in the day, classes at two of the school's campuses were taught remotely and some dining halls were closed due to the threat. Regular operations were expected to resume Wednesday, the university said.

• Louisiana: Several homes were damaged in northern Louisiana's Caldwell Parish, where the National Weather Service reports a tornado is believed to have struck Tuesday night, CNN affiliate KNOE reported. At least one home collapsed, with bricks, boxes, a mattress and other debris strewn around the area, KNOE video showed.

More than 41,000 power outages were reported in the Southeast on Wednesday morning, including 25,000 in Alabama, 12,000 in Tennessee and 4,000 in Mississippi, according to utility tracker PowerOutage.us.

Some parts of the South, including between Huntsville and Birmingham in Alabama, saw between 2 and 4 inches of rain Tuesday.

On Tuesday, the storm prediction center issued a rare "particularly dangerous situation" tornado watch, which is typically designated for the most significant severe-storm threats. That watch was in effect for central Mississippi, northeast Louisiana and southwest Arkansas through early Wednesday and has since expired.

System to weaken Wednesday, though strong morning storms still possible

Threats of severe weather remained Wednesday morning.

A tornado watch was in effect for parts of southern Alabama, the Florida Panhandle and extreme southwestern Georgia until 11 a.m. CT.

"Thunderstorms capable of producing scattered damaging winds and a tornado or two will be possible" in these areas Wednesday morning, the Storm Prediction Center said.

Storms are expected to diminish in coverage and intensity through the afternoon across southeast Georgia and north Florida.

The-CNN-Wire

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CNN's Joe Sutton, Ryan Young, Sharif Paget, Robert Shackelford, Andi Babineau, Sara Smart and Taylor Ward contributed to this report.

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