The McGill Daily

Hurricane Irma ravages the Caribbean

- Marina Cupido

Beginning on Wednesday, September 6, Hurricane Irma wreaked a path of devastatio­n across the Caribbean. As of Friday evening, the storm’s death toll stood at 84. It may continue to rise in the coming days, as the affected communitie­s continue to assess the scale of the damage.

For many island nations, the damage caused by the storm has been apocalypti­c. In Barbuda, the first island hit by Irma, 90 per cent of buildings were destroyed, and 50 per cent of the population left homeless. The French-administer­ed territory of St Martin was reported to have been 95 per cent destroyed, while more than a million Puerto Ricans were left without power.

One of the strongest hurricanes ever recorded in the Atlantic ocean, Irma initially ranked as a category 5 on the Saffir– Simpson scale, meaning its wind speed was over 252 kilometres per hour. By the time it made landfall in Florida on September 10, Irma had become a category 4 storm, but it did substantia­l damage to the state nonetheles­s, destroying one in four homes in the Florida Keys and causing widespread power outages.

The devastatio­n caused by Irma has reawakened controvers­y over the American Red Cross (ARC) and its handling of donations. Much of this controvers­y stems from a 2015 report by NPR and Propublica, which charged the ARC with diverting tens of millions of dollars raised to support vital humanitari­an efforts in Haiti. The ARC has denied mishandlin­g relief funds, but has found corruption rumours difficult to shake. As the storm ravaged one Caribbean island after another, many of the region’s inhabitant­s took to Twitter to beg internatio­nal observers not to donate to the ARC, and instead to channel much-needed funding to local relief organizati­ons.

Both in the U.S. and across the Caribbean, Irma’s impact heightened already vast disparitie­s between wealthy and impoverish­ed communitie­s. In Florida, where the wealth gap is significan­tly higher than most other states, Miami Beach millionair­es left their securely hurricane-proofed mansions in compliance with a mandatory evacuation order. A few miles away in the primarily Black neighbourh­ood of Liberty City, many residents rode out the storm with limited supplies and little or no protection for their homes.

On the island of St. Martin, a wellknown tax haven, an outcry erupted after multiple reports described evacuation boats prioritizi­ng wealthy, white American tourists over the island’s local population. It was also alleged that Air France initially tripled its ticket prices for flights out of St. Martin and nearby St. Barthélemy, rendering them inaccessib­le to most locals.

Arriving in the immediate aftermath of hurricanes Harvey and Katia, and followed closely by hurricane Jose, Irma has also sparked much debate over the role played by climate change in these consecutiv­e disasters. The consensus seems to be that while climate change cannot be said to have caused any of these storms, it certainly made their impact deadlier. Notably, rising sea levels exacerbate the storm surges (devastatin­g waves and flooding) caused by hurricanes, and warmer temperatur­es result in more evaporatio­n, and thus heavier rainfall. Many scientific authoritie­s are predicting that the coming decades will bring hurricanes of Irma’s calibre with increasing frequency.

 ?? Nora Mccready | The Mcgill Daily ??
Nora Mccready | The Mcgill Daily

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