The Asian Age

Monster Maria pummels Puerto Rico, 3.4 million people without power

Flash floods bring fresh misery 3.4m people without power Infrastruc­ture destroyed

- HECTOR RETAMAL and EDGARDO RODRIGUEZ

Flash floods brought fresh misery to Puerto Rico on Thursday after its infrastruc­ture was shattered by Hurricane Maria.

The hurricane, which Mr Trump said had ‘absolutely obliterate­d’ the island, left its 3.4 million people totally without power and officials said it may be months before it is fully restored.

The storm was blamed for 10 deaths in the Caribbean, including a man in northern Puerto Rico's Bayamon district who was struck by a board he had used to cover his windows.

Though the storm had moved back out to sea, authoritie­s declared a flash flood warning for all of Puerto Rico as "torrential" rains continued to lash the island.

"If possible, move to higher ground NOW!" the National Weather Service station in San Juan said in a tweet, calling the flooding "catastroph­ic."

Puerto Rico was expected to receive 20 to 30 inches of rain through Saturday, with some isolated areas receiving 35 inches, the National Hurricane Center said.

The rain had turned some roads in the US territory into muddy brown rivers, impassable to all but the largest of vehicles.

Toppled trees, street signs and power cables were strewn across roads that were also littered with debris.

Although Maria has now passed over Puerto Rico and lost some of its power, it is still packing winds of 185 kilometres per hour and moving northwards towards the Turks and Caicos Islands after brushing the Republic.

Puerto Rico's Governor Ricardo Rossello, who called Maria "the most devastatin­g storm in a century" said the island was having to contend with mass flooding and a total breakdown of its power and telecommun­ications infrastruc­ture.

Ricardo Ramos, who heads the island's electricit­y board, said it could take months before power is fully restored. Dominican

"We recognize that the system, you know, has been totally destroyed," he said of the electricit­y network.

While the island had suffered major blackouts from previous hurricanes, Ramos said the impact would be felt much more keenly this time.

"Everybody uses, of course, their social media, and the kids play on their electronic games and video games, and now really the customer has changed," he told CNN.

"I guess it's a good time for dads to buy a glove and ball and change the way you entertain your children and the way you are going to go to school and the way you are going to cook for gas stoves other than electric."

In San Juan, where tens of thousands rode out the storm in shelters or else hunkered down in their homes, residents told of their terrifying ordeal.

"This was absolutely the worst experience we've had with a hurricane," Kim Neis, an American who has lived on the island for 30 years, said.

"None of the others were anything like as intense as this." Rossello imposed a 6:00 pm to 6:00 am curfew until Saturday and warned of flooding and mudslides.

"I urge the people of Puerto Rico to commit to peace, understand­ing, and good judgment during these difficult times for our island," he said.

There were reports of looting and authoritie­s said 10 people had been arrested.Maria has already torn through several Caribbean islands, leaving at least seven people dead on Dominica.

In the French territory of Guadeloupe, one person was killed.

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 ?? — AFP ?? Electricit­y poles and lines lay toppled after Hurricane Maria hit the eastern region of Puerto Rico on Wednesday.
— AFP Electricit­y poles and lines lay toppled after Hurricane Maria hit the eastern region of Puerto Rico on Wednesday.

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