Times Colonist

Irma devastates Caribbean, heads for Florida

Deadly Category 5 smashes homes, schools, resorts and roads

- EVENS SANON and DANICA COTO

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — French, British and Dutch military authoritie­s rushed aid to a devastated string of Caribbean islands Thursday after hurricane Irma left at least 11 people dead and thousands homeless as it spun toward Florida for what could be a catastroph­ic blow this weekend.

Warships and planes were dispatched with food, water and troops after the fearsome Category 5 storm smashed homes, schools and roads, laying waste to some of the world’s most beautiful and exclusive tourist destinatio­ns.

Hundreds of kilometres to the west, Florida braced for the onslaught, with forecaster­s warning that Irma could slam headlong into the Miami metropolit­an area of six million people. More than a half-million people in Miami-Dade County were ordered to leave as Irma closed in with winds of 280 kilometres an hour.

The hurricane was still north of the Dominican Republic and Haiti on Thursday evening, sweeping the neighbouri­ng nations on Hispaniola island with high winds and rain while battering the Turks and Caicos islands on its other side.

Big waves smashed a dozen homes into rubble in the Dominican fishing community of Nagua, but work crews said all the residents had left before the storm. Officials said 11,200 people in all had left vulnerable areas, while 55,000 soldiers had been deployed to help the cleanup.

In Haiti, two people were injured by a falling tree, a national roadway was blocked by debris and roofs were torn from houses along the northern coast but there were no immediate reports of deaths.

Officials warned that could change as Irma continued to lash Haiti, where deforested hillsides are prone to devastatin­g mudslides that have wiped out entire neighbourh­oods of precarious­ly built homes in flood zones.

“We are vulnerable. We don’t have any equipment to help the population,” Josue Alusma, mayor of the northern city of Port de Paix, said on Radio Zenith FM.

About a million people were without power in Puerto Rico after Irma sideswiped the island overnight, and nearly half the territory’s hospitals were relying on generators. No injuries were reported.

The first islands hit by the storm were scenes of terrible destructio­n.

French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe said four people were confirmed dead and about 50 injured on the French side of St. Martin, an island split between Dutch and French control, where homes were splintered and road signs scattered by the fierce winds. The cafés and clothing shops of the picturesqu­e seaside village of Marigot were submerged in brown floodwater­s and people surveyed the wreckage from whatever shelter they could find. The toll could rise because rescue teams had yet to get a complete look at the damage.

At least four people were killed in the U.S. Virgin Islands, and officials said they expected to find more bodies. Authoritie­s described the damage as catastroph­ic and said crews were struggling to reopen roads and restore power.

Three more deaths were reported on the British island of Anguilla, as well as Barbuda and the Dutch side of St. Martin.

Irma also slammed the French island of St. Barts, tearing off roofs and knocking out electricit­y in the high-end tourist destinatio­n.

French Interior Minister Gerard Collomb said 100,000 food rations were sent to St. Barts and St. Martin, the equivalent of four days of supplies.

“It’s a tragedy. We’ll need to rebuild both islands,” he said. “Most of the schools have been destroyed.”

Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said the storm “caused wide-scale destructio­n of infrastruc­ture, houses and businesses.”

“There is no power, no gasoline, no running water. Houses are under water, cars are floating through the streets, inhabitant­s are sitting in the dark in ruined houses and are cut off from the outside world,” he said.

In the U.S. Virgin Islands, Gov Kenneth Mapp said the U.S. military was sending troops to aid relief efforts. The primary focus for now is “making sure people have meals, water and shelter,” Mapp said. “An event of this magnitude is very chilling.”

The territory’s two islands were battered by 240 km/h winds for four hours. Two fire stations, two fire police stations and the hospital on St. Thomas were destroyed. A curfew was ordered for St. John and St. Thomas that also covered about 5,000 tourists who were unable to leave before the storm.

Irma, the most potent Atlantic Ocean hurricane ever recorded, appeared likely to rip into heavily populated South Florida on Sunday afternoon after threatenin­g parts of the Turks and Caicos and the Bahamas today and sweeping along Cuba’s northern coast on Saturday.

Farther out in the Atlantic, Hurricane José strengthen­ed into a Category 3 storm with 195 km/h winds and posed a potential threat for Saturday to some of the same islands ravaged by Irma.

 ??  ?? Hurrican Irma cut a path of devastatio­n across St. Martin, leaving thousands homeless after destroying buildings and uprooting trees.
Hurrican Irma cut a path of devastatio­n across St. Martin, leaving thousands homeless after destroying buildings and uprooting trees.
 ??  ?? Juan Negron, right, prepares to start up a power generator in front of what’s left of his property on the island of Culebra, Puerto Rico.
Juan Negron, right, prepares to start up a power generator in front of what’s left of his property on the island of Culebra, Puerto Rico.

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