Albuquerque Journal

Hurricane Matthew soaks Colombia, heads for Jamaica

Powerful storm leaves two dead

- BY HOWARD CAMPBELL ASSOCIATED PRESS

KINGSTON, Jamaica — One of the most powerful Atlantic hurricanes in recent history weakened a little on Saturday as it drenched coastal Colombia and roared across the Caribbean on a course that threatened Jamaica, Haiti and Cuba.

Matthew briefly reached the top hurricane classifica­tion, Category 5, and was the strongest Atlantic hurricane since Felix in 2007.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said Matthew’s winds had slipped from a peak of 160 mph to a still-potentiall­y devastatin­g 140 mph and it was expected to near Jamaica and southweste­rn Haiti early Monday.

The forecast track would carry it across Cuba and into the Bahamas, with an outside chance of a brush with Florida, though that would be several days away.

“It’s too early to rule out what impacts, if any, would occur in the United States and Florida,” said Dennis Feltgen, a spokesman at the Hurricane Center.

As Matthew skimmed past the northern tip of South America there were reports of at least one death — the second attributed to the storm.

Authoritie­s in the region overall breathed a sigh of relief as the storm triggered heavy flooding in towns along the La Guajira peninsula of Colombia, but damage overall was minimal. Some officials were even grateful for the rain after a multi-year drought in the poverty-stricken area.

“Families that evacuated are returning to their homes,” said La Guajira Gov. Jorge Velez. “The dikes and wells filled up, the earth is moist, and this benefits agricultur­e in an area where it hasn’t rained for five years, benefiting the community.”

Authoritie­s say that at least 27 houses were damaged and two roads were washed out. One person, a 67-year indigenous man, was carried away to his death by a flash flood in an area where it hadn’t rained for four years.

Elsewhere, all across Colombia’s Caribbean coastline, authoritie­s have set up emergency shelters, closed access to beaches and urged residents living near the ocean to move inland in preparatio­n for storm surges that they said will reach their most-intense moment sometime Saturday.

There’s also concern that heavy rain across much of the country this weekend could dampen turnout for a nationwide referendum today on a historic peace accord between the government and leftist rebels.

In Jamaica, high surf began pounding the coast and flooding temporaril­y closed the road linking the capital to its airport. Carl Ferguson, head of the marine police, said people were starting to heed calls to relocate from small islands and areas near rural waterways.

Residents of the capital, Kingston, crowded supermarke­ts to buy bottled water, canned food and batteries, and there was already flooding in the coastal town of Port Royal, where officials are urging residents to seek refuge in government shelters once they open today .

Many Jamaicans also began stocking up for the emergency.

“I left work to pick up a few items, candles, tin stuff, bread,” 41-year-old Angella Wage said at a crowded store in the Half Way Tree area of Kingston. “We can never be too careful.”

Feltgen said storm force winds and rain will arrive well before the center of the storm. Jamaicans “basically have daylight today, they have tonight and they have daylight tomorrow to take care of what needs to be done,” he said.

Jamaicans are accustomed to intense storms, but Hurricane Matthew looked particular­ly threatenin­g. At its peak, it was more powerful than Hurricane Gilbert, which made landfall on the island in September 1988 and was the most destructiv­e storm in the country’s modern history.

The U.S. Navy base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, is also potentiall­y in the path of the storm. A mandatory evacuation of non-essential personnel, including family members of military personnel, was underway and everyone remaining behind was being told to take shelter, said Julie Ann Ripley, a spokeswoma­n. About 5,500 people live on the base, including 61 men held at the detention center.

Forecaster­s said rainfall totals could reach 10 to 15 inches with isolated maximum amounts of 25 inches in Jamaica and southweste­rn Haiti.

In Haiti, civil protection officials broadcast warnings of a coming storm surge and big waves, saying the country would be “highly threatened” from the approachin­g system over the next 72 hours. They urged families to prepare emergency food and water kits.

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