The Star Malaysia

Sunshine state goes dark

After devastatin­g Haiti and leaving more than 800 dead, Hurricane Matthew lashed the sunshine state of Florida with driving wind and rain, flooding streets with ocean water. More than million people were left without power and at least four were believed

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JACKSONVIL­LE: Hurricane Matthew lashed the southeaste­rn US coast with driving wind and rain, flooding streets with ocean water, leaving more than a million people without power and claiming four lives.

Millions of Americans were subject to evacuation orders and curfews slapped on cities as the lethal storm barrelled north after killing more than 800 people in Haiti, and storming through Jamaica, Cuba, the Dominican Republic – where it left four dead – and the Bahamas.

“The weather experts have described Matthew as a once in a 100-year type of storm,” said Mayor Lenny Curry in Jacksonvil­le, Florida, home to 850,000 people – nearly half of whom had been evacuated.

“We want our citizens to be safe. Our focus throughout this event has been public safety.”

Matthew savaged Haiti as a ruinous Category Four hurricane, but weakened as it approached the US mainland, where emergency services were on lockdown and millions of people were urged to evacuate.

The National Hurricane Center (NHC) said Matthew packed 175km an hour winds, with torrential rains and storm surges of up to 3m capable of devastatin­g damage.

“This is still a really dangerous hurricane,” said President Barack Obama. “The potential for storm surge, flooding, loss of life and severe property damage continues to exist.”

He has declared federal states of emergency in Florida, Georgia, and North and South Carolina. Authoritie­s struck almost apocalypti­c tones, with increasing­ly urgent warning to evacuate coastal and low-lying areas, but many heeded no intention, hunkering down at home.

Torrential rain and strong winds lashed cities, bringing down trees, causing tall buildings to sway after night fell and turning normally bustling population centers into ghost towns.

At least four people died in Florida – two women killed by falling trees – a third woman from a heart attack and an 82-year-old man who experience­d stroke-like symptoms and whom paramedics could not reach.

Matthew damaged roofs at the Kennedy Space Center but spared Florida’s heavily populated south-central coast a direct hit.

“The worst effects are still likely to come,” warned Governor Rick Scott.

In St Augustine – a one-time Spanish colony that calls itself the nation’s oldest city – roads were deserted, many blocked by downed trees or flooded with ocean water and the city eerily empty under darkly menacing skies. — AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? Taking a beating: Strong winds lashing the docks on Cocoa Beach, Florida. Matthew passed by offshore as a Category 3 hurricane.
— AFP Taking a beating: Strong winds lashing the docks on Cocoa Beach, Florida. Matthew passed by offshore as a Category 3 hurricane.
 ??  ?? Mighty Matthew: Homeowner Joe Lovece surveying the damage to the kitchen at the back of his oceanfront home after Hurricane Matthew passed Ormond Beach, Florida. — Reuters
Mighty Matthew: Homeowner Joe Lovece surveying the damage to the kitchen at the back of his oceanfront home after Hurricane Matthew passed Ormond Beach, Florida. — Reuters

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