The Borneo Post

Nine dead as Hurricane Irma rips through Caribbean

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MARIGOT: Powerful Hurricane Irma cut a swathe of deadly destructio­n as it roared through the Caribbean on Wednesday, claiming at least nine lives and turning the tropical islands of Barbuda and St Martin into mountains of rubble.

One of the most powerful Atlantic storms on record, the rare Category Five hurricane churned westward off the northern coast of Puerto Rico early yesterday on a potential collision course with south Florida where at-risk areas were evacuated.

St Martin — a pristine resort known for its vibrant nightlife — suffered the full fury of the storm, with rescuers on the French side of the island saying at least eight people had died there and another 21 were injured.

With some 95 per cent of homes destroyed on the French side of the island — the other half belongs to The Netherland­s — a delegation of troops, rescuers and medics arrived from France headed by Overseas Territorie­s Minister Annick Girardin to help with rescue efforts.

“It’s an enormous catastroph­e. Ninety-five per cent of the island is destroyed. I’m in shock. It’s frightenin­g,” top local official Daniel Gibbs said in a radio interview.

Guadeloupe prefect Eric Maire called the situation in St Martin ‘dramatic’, saying the island — which is divided between the Netherland­s and France — was without drinking water or electricit­y, and warning the death toll was almost certain to rise.

To the southeast, Barbuda, part of the twin island nation of Antigua and Barbuda, suffered ‘absolute devastatio­n’ with 95 per cent of properties damaged, and up to 30 per cent demolished, according to Prime Minister Gaston Browne.

“Barbuda now is literally rubble,” Browne said.

One person is known to have died on the island of 1,600 residents, apparently a child whose family was trying to get to safer ground.

And on the island of Barbados, a 16-year- old profession­al surfer named Zander Venezia died while trying to ride a monster wave generated by the storm, the World Surf League said.

Irma was packing maximum sustained winds of up to 295 kilometers per hour as it followed a projected path that would see it hit the northern edges of the Dominican Republic and Haiti on Thursday, continuing past eastern Cuba before veering north towards Florida.

As of 0300 GMT, the eye of the storm was just north of Puerto Rico and the hurricane was moving west-northwest at 26 kilometers per hour.

More than half of Puerto Rico’s population of three million is without power, with rivers breaking their banks in the center and north of the island where Governor Ricardo Rossello activated the National Guard and opened storm shelters sufficient for up to 62,000 people.

Blanca Santiago, who works at a beachside hotel in Puerto Rico’s capital San Juan, described the howl of the wind whipping the coastline: “It was as if there were ghosts inside my home.”

A total of 460 shelters have been set up around the island, the governor said.

“We already have rather major damage,” Rossello said.

US President Donald Trump declared a state of emergency in Puerto Rico as well as in the US Virgin Islands and Florida where he said the outlook was ‘not good’.

In the Dominican Republic, which forms the eastern half of the island of Hispaniola which it shares with Haiti, the government began to evacuate people from areas declared to be under hurricane alert.

The capital Santo Domingo was calm after a chaotic Tuesday which saw people rushing to supermarke­ts to stock up on food. The government gave people a day off work yesterday and canceled classes for the rest of the week.

Category Five is the highest on the scale for hurricanes in the Atlantic and hurricanes of this intensity are rare.

They can cause severe flooding, tear off roofing, shatter windows and uproot palm trees, turning them into deadly projectile­s.

Irma follows hot on the heels of Hurricane Harvey which devastated swaths of Texas and Louisiana in late August. Irma was hitting the Caribbean even as two other tropical storms, Jose in the Atlantic Ocean and Katia in the Gulf of Mexico, were upgraded to hurricane status. — AFP

It’s an enormous catastroph­e. Ninety-five per cent of the island is destroyed. I’m in shock. It’s frightenin­g. Daniel Gibbs, local official

 ??  ?? A handout grab image made from a video released by RCI Guadeloupe shows flooded streets and damage on the French overseas island of Saint-Martin, filmed from a terrace of the Beach Plaza hotel after high winds from Hurricane Irma hit the island. — AFP...
A handout grab image made from a video released by RCI Guadeloupe shows flooded streets and damage on the French overseas island of Saint-Martin, filmed from a terrace of the Beach Plaza hotel after high winds from Hurricane Irma hit the island. — AFP...
 ??  ?? Members of the civil defence run as Hurricane Irma howls past Puerto Rico after thrashing several smaller Caribbean islands, in Fajardo, Puerto Rico . — Reuters photo
Members of the civil defence run as Hurricane Irma howls past Puerto Rico after thrashing several smaller Caribbean islands, in Fajardo, Puerto Rico . — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? A picture shows a damaged street of Gustavia on the French overseas collectivi­ty of SaintBarth­elemy in the Caribbean. — AFP photo
A picture shows a damaged street of Gustavia on the French overseas collectivi­ty of SaintBarth­elemy in the Caribbean. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? A picture released by Facebook user Kevin Barralon shows a damaged street of Gustavia on the French overseas collectivi­ty of Saint-Barthelemy in the Caribbean following hurricane Irma. — Reuters photo
A picture released by Facebook user Kevin Barralon shows a damaged street of Gustavia on the French overseas collectivi­ty of Saint-Barthelemy in the Caribbean following hurricane Irma. — Reuters photo

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