The Telegram (St. John's)

Caribbean residents left reeling

Death toll expected to rise as hurricane Irma continues path of destructio­n

- BY DESMOND BOYLAN AND BEN FOX

A deadly hurricane Irma scraped Cuba’s northern coast Friday on a course toward Florida, leaving in its wake a ravaged string of Caribbean resort islands strewn with splintered lumber, corrugated metal and broken concrete.

The death toll stood at 22 and was expected to rise as rescuers reached some of the hardest-hit areas.

And a new danger lay on the horizon to the east: hurricane Jose, a Category 4 storm with 250 kph winds that could punish some of the devastated areas all over again this weekend.

“I don’t think it takes a rocket scientist to know that further damage is imminent,” said Inspector Frankie Thomas of the Royal Police Force of Antigua and Barbuda.

Irma weakened from a Category 5 to a still-fearsome Category 4 on Friday morning with winds of 250 kph.

The hurricane smashed homes, schools, stores, roads and boats on Wednesday and Thursday as it rolled over islands long known as turquoise-water playground­s of the rich, including St. Martin, St. Barts, St. Thomas, Barbuda and Anguilla.

It knocked out power, water and telephone service, trapped thousands of tourists and stripped the lush green trees of leaves, leaving an eerie, blastedloo­king landscape. Authoritie­s reported looting and gunfire in St. Martin, and a curfew was imposed in the U.S. Virgin Islands.

In heavily damaged Barbuda, Stevet Jeremiah’s 2-year-old son was swept to his death after the hurricane ripped the roof off her house and filled it with water.

“There was so much water beating past us. We had to crawl to get to safety. Crawl,” she said. “I have never seen anything like this in my life, in all the years I experience­d hurricanes. And I don’t ever, ever, ever want to see something like this again.”

She added: “I have nothing. Not even an ID to say my name. Nothing. House gone. The only thing you see is the foundation.”

The crisis was a glimpse of what could lie ahead early Sunday for Florida, which braced for what many fear could be the long-dreaded Big One, with the Miami metropolit­an area of 6 million in the crosshairs.

Irma was at one point the most powerful recorded storm in the open Atlantic. It could be one of the most devastatin­g storms ever to hit Florida, a state that has undergone rapid developmen­t since the last major hurricane struck a dozen years ago.

Florida residents and tourists faced gas shortages and gridlock as a half-million people in Miami-dade County were ordered to clear out.

Irma rolled past the Dominican Republic and Haiti and battered the Turks and Caicos Islands early Friday with waves as high as 6 metres. Communicat­ions went down as the storm slammed into the islands, and the extent of the devastatio­n was not immediatel­y clear.

The hurricane also spun along the northern coast of Cuba, where tens of thousands of people were being moved to safety, including thousands of tourists along a shoreline dotted with all-inclusive resorts.

U.S., Dutch, French and British authoritie­s used warships and military planes to rush food, water and troops to the stricken zone.

On the island of St. Thomas, part of the U.S. Virgin Islands, the hospital was destroyed, power lines and towers were toppled, a water and sewage treatment plant was heavily damaged, and the harbour was in ruins, along with hundreds of homes and dozens of businesses.

Laura Strickling, an opera singer who moved to St. Thomas with her husband three years ago from Washington so he could take a job there, huddled with him and their yearold daughter in a basement apartment along with another family as the storm raged.

“The noise was just deafening. It was so loud we thought the roof was gone. The windows were boarded up, so it was hot and we had no AC, no power,” she said. She said she and the three other adults “were terrified but keeping it together for the babies.

Strickling, who used to visit her husband in Afghanista­n when he worked there, added: “I’ve had to sit through a Taliban gunfight, and this was scarier.”

Thousands of tourists were trapped on St. Martin, St. Barts, and the Virgin Islands in the path of Jose, which threatened to strike as early as Saturday. Authoritie­s rushed to evacuate as many people as possible from Barbuda ahead of the new storm.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? A boy sits on wall near his home flooded by heavy rains brought on by hurricane Irma, in Fort-liberte, Haiti, Friday.
AP PHOTO A boy sits on wall near his home flooded by heavy rains brought on by hurricane Irma, in Fort-liberte, Haiti, Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada