The Herald (South Africa)

Hurricane Fiona slams Turks and Caicos Islands as Category 3 storm

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Hurricane Fiona slammed into the Turks and Caicos Islands as a powerful Category 3 storm on Tuesday, dumping heavy rains and triggering floods on the Caribbean archipelag­o after cutting a path of destructio­n through the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico.

US officials said the storm had claimed four lives in Puerto Rico. A fifth person was killed in Guadeloupe earlier in the week.

US health secretary Xavier Becerra declared a public health emergency for Puerto Rico on Tuesday night, freeing up federal funds and equipment to assist the island.

The storm slammed Grand Turk, the Turks and Caicos’s biggest island on Tuesday morning, before hitting its main cluster of islands several hours later.

Strengthen­ing with wind speeds of 201km/h, Fiona was heading north towards Bermuda on Tuesday night and was expected to strike as a Category 4 storm today, the National Hurricane Centre (NHC) said.

Canadian officials warned of powerful post-tropical conditions hitting Nova Scotia, Newfoundla­nd, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island by Saturday.

Turks and Caicos deputy governor Anya Williams said power outages had hit five islands but no deaths had yet been reported.

“Shutting the country down early is what helped us save lives,” Williams said.

She said her government was communicat­ing with the British Royal Navy and US Coast Guard, with the British Navy patrol vessel HMS Medway expected to arrive later yesterday to help with rescue efforts.

Jaquan Harvey, 37, a businessma­n who lives on Grand Turk, said wind drove rain water through the seams of the windows and doors as his house shook.

“It was very loud, like there were giants outside shouting and roaring,” Harvey said.

“You could feel the pressure of the air as everything rattled.”

To the south, the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico were stunned by the storm’s intensity and were struggling to cope with the aftermath.

Deanne Criswell, head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema), arrived in Puerto Rico — a US territory — on Tuesday to assess the damage, agency officials said.

Officials said multiple Fema teams, including two searchand-rescue units, were being deployed and several hundred Fema personnel were already on the island.

Hurricane Fiona was a painful reminder of Puerto Rico’s vulnerabil­ity.

Tuesday marked the fiveyear anniversar­y of Hurricane Maria, a Category 5 storm which killed about 3,000 people and destroyed its power grid. Thousands of Puerto Ricans still live under tarpaulin roofs.

Fiona made landfall in Puerto Rico on Sunday afternoon, dumping up to 76.2cm of rain in some areas and triggering catastroph­ic flooding.

Nearly 80% of Puerto Rico remained without power on Tuesday, according to Poweroutag­e.us. Officials said it would take days to reconnect the whole island of 3.3-million people.

“It knocked down many trees, there are downed poles and here in the house we got water where it had never happened before,” Asbertly Vargas, a 40-year-old mechanic, said in Yauco, a town along the island’s southern coast.

Puerto Rico power provider Luma Energy said it had restored electricit­y to 100,000 customers but that it would take days for full restoratio­n.

On the Turks and Caicos Islands, a British Overseas Territory with a population of about 40,000 about 1,125km southeast of Florida, the government told residents to shelter in place until further notice, and ordered businesses to close.

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