Townsville Bulletin

Mass evacuation­s as Irma lashes out

- SARAH BLAKE in Orlando

RESCUERS pulled bodies from the rubble and grieving families carried coffins through the streets at the weekend after Mexico’s biggest earthquake in a century killed 65 people, while elsewhere two died in mudslides unleashed by storm Katia.

Officials raised the death toll from last Thursday night’s quake as more bodies were found in the southern states of Oaxaca and Chiapas.

In the town of Juchitan, Oaxaca, hundreds of families spent the night camped in the streets, too scared to go back inside for fear of aftershock­s. A GRANDMOTHE­R and a man are accused of keeping her 9- year- old granddaugh­ter padlocked inside a wire dog kennel in the basement of a house in Wisconsin.

Racine County sheriff’s deputies and social workers investigat­ed the home near Wind Lake after a teacher made a child abuse complaint.

Gail D. Lalonde, 46, and Dale A. Deavers, 48, were each charged with causing mental harm to a child, false imprisonme­nt, manufactur­ing marijuana and maintainin­g a drug traffickin­g place. M O N S T E R H u r r i c a n e Irma’s deadly winds lashed the US overnight, bringing tornadoes, knocking out power for thousands and driving storm surges of up to 4.6m along Florida’s coast.

More than 75,000 packed into shelters yesterday in the biggest mass evacuation in US history, with seven million told to leave their homes as 18 million Americans were placed under a hurricane warning.

Some chose to ignore the evacuation order while others missed a narrow window to flee after the storm changed course over the weekend to put low- lying west- coast cities of Naples, Fort Myers and Tampa in its crosshairs.

Although Irma’s progress slowed yesterday to a speed of 9.6km/ h, it remains one of the biggest Atlantic hurricanes in history and is twice the width of the state Florida.

“If you have been ordered to evacuate, you need to leave now. This is your last chance to make a good decision,” Governor Rick Scott said last night. “This is a deadly storm and our state has never seen anything like it.”

He warned anyone who ignored mandatory evacuation orders would likely “not survive”.

Irma broke several strength and size records as it churned through the Caribbean last week, and meteorolog­ists yesterday said it had the potential to be one of America’s worst ever hurricanes.

“The core of Hurricane Irma, potentiall­y with winds gusting over 150mph ( 241km/ h) or more, is going to come close,” said Weather Channel hurricane specialist Bryan Norcross. “Buildings in southwest Florida are not, in general, built to withstand these winds.”

US President Donald Trump also urged residents in the impending storm’s path to “get out of its way”.

“Property is replaceabl­e but lives are not and safety has to come first,” he said.

Irma earlier collapsed buildings and battered Cuba with deafening winds and relentless rain, while a second hurricane, Jose, threatened to lash already- reeling islands elsewhere in the Caribbean.

Across a chunk of Cuba, power poles were toppled, trees uprooted and roads blocked. And authoritie­s in the city of Santa Clara said 39 buildings collapsed.

There were no immediate reports of casualties in Cuba in addition to the 22 dead left in Irma’s wake across the Caribbean, where the storm ravaged such lush resort islands as St Martin, St Barts, St Thomas, Barbuda and Anguilla.

 ?? NERVOUS: Evacuees hunker down at Germain Arena in Fort Myers, Florida ahead of Hurricane Irma’s arrival as ( inset) downtown Miami stands empty. Pictures: AFP ??
NERVOUS: Evacuees hunker down at Germain Arena in Fort Myers, Florida ahead of Hurricane Irma’s arrival as ( inset) downtown Miami stands empty. Pictures: AFP

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