Cape Breton Post

Quebecer who survived Irma calls it terrifying

Canadian frigate on standby

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A Quebec man living on the Caribbean island of Saint Martin is calling hurricane Irma the most terrifying experience of his life after 300-km/h winds ripped the roof off his house and others in the same complex.

The Category 5 storm left disaster in its wake Wednesday when it hit Saint Martin, where Rene H. Lepine has lived permanentl­y for four years running a real-estate developmen­t.

Before that, Lepine had been a frequent visitor to the island — his wife and extended family are from the area.

But nothing could prepare him for the fury of Irma.

“It was the most terrifying experience of my life, to put it mildly,” he told The Canadian Press in a Facebook conversati­on Thursday as he used a gas generator to keep his phone charged.

“You realize how powerless you are to circumstan­ces and, other than having prepared yourself for the event, that’s all you can do.

“This thing was of epic proportion­s and it was just totally overwhelmi­ng.”

He took shelter at a brotherin-law’s home, surrounded by cliffs, with no breeze or view of the ocean.

“Well, that’s what actually saved us,” he said. “We were under the wind and we survived it here.”

The 298-km/h winds blew the roof off his own home and others in the same complex.

“You have to realize once the roof was gone, we got 40 inches (100 centimetre­s) of rain,” Lepine said.

He said about a third of the homes on Saint Martin are now uninhabita­ble and that the island hasn’t had water in about 36 hours because of damaged reservoirs.

Irma’s path of devastatio­n across the northern Caribbean left at least 10 dead and thousands homeless after destroying buildings and uprooting trees on a track Thursday that could lead to a catastroph­ic strike on Florida.

Lepine said a big concern now is that the island’s main supply chain in Miami is about to get pounded and that another, somewhat weaker hurricane, Jose, is expected to hit Saint Martin on Saturday.

The airport has sustained critical damage and ships aren’t coming to the island with the ports inoperativ­e.

Lepine said supermarke­ts, hardware and other box stores had their roofs ripped off and can’t resupply.

“How do we get by the next three weeks?,” Lepine asked. “I’m sure in a month, there will be some measures put in place, containers will start coming in and the airport will be operationa­l again.”

In other hurricane-related developmen­ts Thursday:

• Six members of the Quebec legislatur­e who were in Haiti on a co-operation mission were awaiting word on whether they would be able to get a flight out of the country. Parti Quebecois member Diane Lamarre called the situation confusing and said the possibilit­ies of leaving the country were “complicate­d.”

• The Canadian Forces ordered a Halifax-based warship to be at the ready as the military plans for a potential response to Irma. The Canadian military said it is “conducting prudent military planning and preparatio­ns to be in position to support any potential relief efforts” if Ottawa orders a response.

• And Toronto-Dominion Bank said it is closing all 81 of its branches in South Florida in preparatio­n for the arrival of Irma. The bank said the decision was made for the safety of its employees and customers based on the severity of storm forecasts.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Storm damage in the aftermath of Hurricane Irma in St. Martin on Wednesday.
AP PHOTO Storm damage in the aftermath of Hurricane Irma in St. Martin on Wednesday.

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