Flooding from Hurricane Melissa has killed 25 people in Haiti while the storm still churned across Cuba on October 29 after leaving Jamaica with widespread damage and power outages, officials say.
Jean Bertrand Subrème, mayor of the southern Haitian coastal town of Petit-Goâve, told The Associated Press that 25 people died after the La Digue River burst its banks and flooded nearby homes. Dozens of homes collapsed and people were still trapped under rubble as of the morning on October 29, he said.
“I am overwhelmed by the situation,” he said as he pleaded with the government to help rescue victims.
Jamaica rushes to assess the damage
In Jamaica, more than 25 000 people were packed into shelters on October 29, hours after Melissa made landfall as a catastrophic Category 5 storm with top winds of 185 mph, one of the strongest Atlantic hurricanes on record. People kept streaming into the shelters throughout the day after the storm ripped off the roofs of their homes and left them temporarily homeless.
“It’s not going to be an easy road, Jamaica,” said Desmond McKenzie, deputy chairman of Jamaica’s Disaster Risk Management Council. “I know persons… are wondering what their future are going to be like.”
Dana Morris Dixon, Jamaica’s education minister, said that 77 per cent of the island was without power on October 29 but the water systems weren’t greatly affected.
At least one death was reported in the west of Jamaica when a tree fell on a baby, state minister Abka Fitz-Henley told local radio station Nationwide News Network.
Jamaican officials reported complications in assessing the damage, while the National Hurricane Center said the local government had lifted the tropical storm warning.
“There’s a total communication blackout on that side,” Richard Thompson, acting director general of Jamaica’s Office of Disaster Preparedness and Emergency Management, told the Nationwide News Network. More than half a million customers were without power late on October 28.
Prime Minister Andrew Holness plans to fly over the most affected areas, where crews were still trying to access areas and determine the extent of the damage, Dana Morris Dixon, Jamaica’s education minister said.
Extensive damage was reported in parts of Clarendon in the south and in the southwestern parish of St Elizabeth, which was “underwater,” said Desmond McKenzie, deputy chairman of Jamaica’s Disaster Risk Management Council. He said the storm damaged four hospitals and left one without power, forcing officials to evacuate 75 patients.
Santa Cruz town in St Elizabeth parish was devastated. A landslide blocked main roads. Streets were reduced to mud pits. Residents swept water from homes as they tried to salvage belongings. Winds ripped off part of the roof at St Elizabeth Technical High School, a designated public shelter.
“I never see anything like this before in all my years living here,” resident Jennifer Small said.
“The entire hillside came down last night,” said another resident, Robert James.
The government said it hopes to reopen all of Jamaica’s airports as early as October 30 to ensure quick distribution of emergency relief supplies.
The US government said it was deploying a disaster response team and search and rescue personnel to the region. And the State Department said non-emergency personnel and family members of US government employees were authorised to leave Jamaica because of the storm’s impact.
Cuba still riding out the storm
Officials reported collapsed houses, blocked mountain roads and roofs blown off in Cuba on October 29, with the most destruction concentrated in the southwest and northwest. Authorities said about 735 000 people remained in shelters in eastern Cuba.
“That was hell. All night long, it was terrible,” said Reinaldo Charon in Santiago de Cuba. The 52-year-old was one of the few people venturing out, covered by a plastic sheet in the intermittent rain.
Parts of Granma province, especially the municipal capital, Jiguaní, were underwater, said Gov. Yanetsy Terry Gutiérrez. More than 15 inches (40 centimetres) of rain was reported in Jiguaní’s settlement of Charco Redondo.
Melissa had top sustained winds of 100mph (155kph), a Category 2 storm, and was moving northeast at 14mph (22kph) according to the US National Hurricane Center in Miami. The hurricane was centered about 150 miles (245 kilometres) south of the central Bahamas.
Melissa was forecast to continue weakening as it crossed Cuba but remain strong as it moves across the southeastern or central Bahamas later on October 29. It was expected to make its way late October 30 near or to the west of Bermuda. Haiti and the Turks and Caicos also braced for its effects.
The storm was expected to generate a surge of up to 12 feet (3.6 metres) in the region and drop up to 20 inches (51 centimetres) of rain in parts of eastern Cuba. Intense rain could cause life-threatening flooding with numerous landslides, US forecasters said.
The hurricane could worsen Cuba’s severe economic crisis, which already has led to prolonged power blackouts, as well as fuel and food shortages.
“There will be a lot of work to do. We know there will be a lot of damage,” Cuban president Miguel Díaz-Canel said in a televised address, and urged the population not to underestimate the power of Melissa, “the strongest ever to hit national territory.”
(Rodríguez reported from Havana and Myers from Santa Cruz, Jamaica. Dánica Coto in San Juan, Puerto Rico, contributed.)
Source: Associated Press News




