Business World

Maria batters Dominica as PM predicts dire outcome

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POINTE-À-PITRE — Hurricane Maria battered the Caribbean island of Dominica on Tuesday, with its prime minister predicting potentiall­y grave losses and mass destructio­n as winds and rain from the Category Five storm barrelled into territorie­s still reeling from Irma.

With residents fleeing homes Maria made landfall with top winds swirling at 160 miles (257 kilometers) per hour, the US National Hurricane Center (NHC) said.

“We have lost all what money can buy and replace,” Dominica’s premier Roosevelt Skerrit posted on Facebook, saying there were initial reports of “widespread devastatio­n.”

“My greatest fear for the morning is that we will wake to news of serious physical injury and possible deaths as a result of likely landslides triggered by persistent rains.”

Earlier, he said his roof had been blown off, his house was flooding and he was “at the complete mercy of the hurricane.”

“Rough! Rough! Rough!” he wrote on Facebook, later adding that he had been rescued.

Dangerous storm surges, destructiv­e waves, flash floods and mudslides also threaten the Leeward Islands — the island group that includes Martinique, Puerto Rico and the US and British Virgin islands — the NHC said.

The center earlier warned that “preparatio­ns to protect life and property should be rushed to completion” as the eye of the storm approached Dominica, eventually hitting at 0115 GMT.

Guadeloupe — the bridgehead for aid for Irma-hit French territorie­s — ordered all residents to take shelter in a maximum-level “violet alert” effective from 8:00 p.m. as powerful rains drenched the French Caribbean island.

St. Kitts, Nevis, the British island of Montserrat, Culebra and Vieques were also on alert.

On Martinique, also part of France, energy supplier EDF said power had been cut off from 16,000 homes, although a hurricane warning on the island was later downgraded to a tropical storm.

In rain-lashed St. Lucia, which also faced a tropical storm warning, flooding, mudslides and power outages were reported in parts of the island.

Dominica’s airport and ports have been closed, and the local water company shut down its systems to protect its intake valves from debris churned up by the storm.

Criticized for the pace of relief efforts in their overseas territorie­s devastated by Irma, Britain, France and the Netherland­s said they were boosting resources for the Caribbean as Maria approaches.

“We are planning for the unexpected, we are planning for the worst,” said Chris Austin, head of a UK military task force set up to deal with Irma, as the British Virgin Islands readied for the storm.

On the island of St. Martin, which is split between France and the Netherland­s, authoritie­s announced a red alert ahead of Maria’s arrival.

The Dutch navy tweeted that troops were heading to the two tiny neighborin­g islands of Saba and St. Eustatius to ensure security following widespread complaints after the first hurricane of looting and lawlessnes­s on St. Martin, among the worst hit by Irma, with 14 killed.

French Interior Minister Gerard Collomb said 110 more soldiers would be deployed to the region to reinforce about 3,000 people already there shoring up security, rebuilding infrastruc­ture and distributi­ng aid.

The hurricane was expected to pass 30 kilometers south of Guadeloupe, with the height of the storm expected at 3:00 a.m. “Everyone must remain inside, and not venture out for any reason,” said the island’s prefecture authority.

HURRICANE SERIES

Irma, a Category 5 hurricane, left around 40 people dead in the Caribbean before churning west and pounding Florida, where the death toll stood at 50 Monday.

It broke weather records when it whipped up winds of 295 kilometers per hour for more than 33 hours straight.

Another hurricane, Jose, is also active in the Atlantic and has triggered tropical storm warnings for the northeaste­rn United States.

Many scientists are convinced that megastorms such as Irma, and Harvey before it, are intensifie­d by the greater energy they can draw from oceans that are warming as a result of climate change.

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