The National - News

FLORIDA WAITS IN GLOOM AS HURRICANE IRMA DRAWS NEAR

US state’s largest evacuation as storm clouds and wild winds bear down

- ROB CRILLY

Hurricane Irma sparked the greatest mass evacuation in Florida’s history as it closed in on the state yesterday.

Surging seas and driving rain sent hundreds of thousands of people into concrete shelters and millions more on to the highways to try to outrun the devastatio­n.

Several counties issued curfews as emergency services braced for one of the fiercest storms to ever hit Florida.

Irma’s 250kph winds have left a trail of damage through the Caribbean, flattening homes and killing more than 20 people.

But there was some good news at the 11th hour for Florida. Irma had been diown graded to a Category 3 storm.

And meteorolog­ists yesterday suggested the path of the storm had drifted to the west, protecting the big eastern cities of Miami and Fort Lauderdale, home to more than seven million people, from the worst of its fury.

The advice, however, remained the same. Those in evacuation zones were told to get to safety while they still could.

Rick Scott, governor of Florida, said: “Once the storm starts law enforcemen­t cannot save you. Do not put your life or your family’s life at risk.”

Philip Levine, mayor of Miami Beach, kept it simple as he addressed residents and visitors. “I beg them please leave Miami Beach. You don’t want to be here. This hurricane is a nuclear hurricane. It has so much power.”

Irma’s winds have brought down power lines and scattered trees like kindling. Tornado warnings were issued in some areas yesterday.

As much as 50 centimetre­s of rain is forecast in some areas.

But the greatest danger lies in the seas around Florida’s peninsula. Even if the eye of the storm tracks along the state’s west coast, Irma’s breadth means no one will escape its deadly effects.

The worst-case scenario would see the storm coinciding not just a normal high tide but with a “king tide”. That could mean storm surges of as much as 3.5 metres.

As a result more than 5.6 million people – or a quarter of the Florida’s population – have been told to leave their homes before Irma was due to thunder ashore in the early hours of today.

The hurricane struck Cuba’s north-east coast as a Category 5 storm yesterday, ripping roofs from buildings and blacking

out thousands of homes. It was the latest Caribbean nation to feel Irma’s wrath.

Elsewhere, authoritie­s began to pick through the damage and count the dead. Gerard Collomb, the French interior minister, said nine people were dead and seven missing in the French territory of St Martin.

A second death was confirmed in the Dutch territory of Sint Maarten.

Meteorolog­ists said the storm had since weakened over Cuba but that it remained a Category 4 hurricane with sustained winds of 215kph. The US National Hurricane Centre in Miami said it was expected to strengthen again before it reached Florida.

That could make Irma more terrifying than Hurricane Andrew, which killed 65 people and destroyed more than 63,000 homes in 1992.

Petrol stations began reporting shortages on Wednesday as the great getaway began. And airlines and airports scrambled to get thousands of people to safety before closing on Friday evening.

Authoritie­s warned travellers that car parks at Orlando, Miami and Fort Lauderdale airports were all filled to capacity. Arriving flights were less than half full and carried relatives worried about aged parents.

Among them was Ralph Bussola, on one of the last flights from New York to Fort Lauderdale, who was planning to take his mother, 90, and father, 92, to a hotel to ride out the storm.

“What’s worrying me is the storm surge,” Mr Bussola said. “They are at about nine foot of elevation but if there’s a 20-foot surge what am I going to do? I can’t put them on the roof.”

Up and down the coast, windows were boarded up and drinking water hoarded. Not even Donald Trump’s empire escaped.

Workers at his Mar-a-Lago club, the Florida resort he nicknamed The Winter White House, spent Friday putting up wooden storm shutters and blocking the front gate with traffic cones.

As winds picked up, the long beach near the resort was mostly empty, except for a couple of brave kitesurfer­s making the most of the conditions.

The surroundin­g town of Palm Beach, a slender barrier island known as the playground of the super-rich, is under a mandatory evacuation.

The Florida Power and Light Company estimated that as many as nine million people could lose electricit­y.

Yet many people in exclusion zones said they were staying put.

Suzi Liebenberg, who said she had lost count of the hurricanes she had endured since Andrew, admitted the early warnings suggested Irma would be among the most severe.

Ms Liebenberg’s home is close to Dania Beach outside Fort Lauderdale, where heavy winds have battered the shore’s palm trees for the past 48 hours.

Local wisdom, she said, had it that new homes, built to advanced standards after the damage of Andrew, or older homes, which had weathered previous storms, offered the best protection.

Ms Liebenberg joined friends at Beach Betty’s, which had boarded up its windows but stayed open as the storm moved closer. Her preparatio­ns, she said, were complete. Now it was time to wait for Irma to do her worst.

“You fill your car up with gas, get your drinking water and then there is nothing much more you can do,” she said.

 ?? Reuters ?? Dark clouds over Miami’s skyline before the arrival of Hurricane Irma to South Florida yesterday
Reuters Dark clouds over Miami’s skyline before the arrival of Hurricane Irma to South Florida yesterday
 ?? Reuters ?? Passengers form a long queue at Orlando Internatio­nal Airport before Hurricane Irma makes landfall
Reuters Passengers form a long queue at Orlando Internatio­nal Airport before Hurricane Irma makes landfall
 ?? Reuters ?? In Estero, Florida, residents line up outside for shelter in the Germain Arena
Reuters In Estero, Florida, residents line up outside for shelter in the Germain Arena

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