Hurricane Irma causes 'major damage' in the Caribbean
A powerful Atlantic Ocean hurricane has slammed into the French Caribbean islands, causing "major damage" en route to Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic, Haiti and Cuba before possibly heading for the US state of Florida.
Hurricane Irma has "blown the roofs" off of buildings,
caused flooding and cut communications between Paris and the French-run
islands of Saint Barthelemy and Saint Martin, Annick Girardin, French
Overseas Territories minister said on Wednesday.
As the rare Category Five storm barreled its way across the Caribbean, it brought gusting winds of up to 294 kilometres per hour, weather experts said.
The hurricane made landfall just before 06:00 GMT in Barbuda, part of the twin island nation of Antigua and Barbuda.
There were no immediate reports of casualties.
Garfield Burford, director of news at
government-owned broadcaster ABS TV in Antigua and Barbuda, told Al
Jazeera that the country has been spared the worse from the "ferocious
storm" as emergency services assess damages.
"It was quite a bit of an experience overnight for us, but all things considered Antigua and Barbuda missed a bullet," he said from Antigua's capital, St. John. "It could've been much worse."
Burford added: "There have been a few minor
injuries that were treated at the hospital but thankfully, no deaths or
serious injuries and that itself is a mricale when you consider the
ferocity of the storm."
'Historic hurricane'
The French weather office said Irma was "a historic hurricane (with) an unprecedented intensity over the Atlantic."
With the islands on maximum alert ahead of the arrival of
the strongest storm ever recorded in the Atlantic, France had raised the
alarm over the fate of some 7,000 people who refused to seek shelter.
"People don't know phenomena of this scale in this part of the Caribbean," Girardin said.
Hurricane Irma carries the potential for coastal storm
surges of up to six metres above normal tide levels, the Miami-based
National Hurricane Centre said on Wednesday.
The National Weather Service said Puerto Rico had not seen a
hurricane of Irma's magnitude since Hurricane San Felipe in 1928, which
killed a total of 2,748 people in Guadeloupe, Puerto Rico and Florida.
Warm water is fuel for hurricanes and Irma is over water that is 1C warmer than normal.
The 26C water that hurricanes need goes about 80 metres
deep, Jeff Masters, meteorology director of the private forecasting
service Weather Underground, told The Associated Press agency.
Its forecast late on Tuesday was for the winds to fluctuate
slightly but for the storm to remain at Category Four or Five strength
for the next day or two.
Dangerous winds
The most dangerous winds, usually nearest to the eye, were
forecast to pass near the northern Virgin Islands and near or just north
of Puerto Rico through Wednesday.
Al Jazeera's meteorologist Richard Angwin said: "The movement
of the storm is pretty steady at 26km/h and it is going to continue to
cross the Caribbean region over the next 24 to 48 hours."
Preparations are under way in Miami, Florida as residents brace for Hurricane Irma [Joe Raedle/Getty Images] |
Other islands in the path of Irma include the Virgin Islands and Anguilla, a small, low-lying territory of about 15,000 people.
US President Donald Trump declared
emergencies in Florida, Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands, and
authorities in the Bahamas said they would evacuate six southern
islands.
"The dangerousness of this event is like nothing we've ever seen," Ricardo Rossello, Puerto Rico governor, said.
"A lot of infrastructure won't be able to withstand this kind of force."
The director of the island's power company has warned that
storm damage could leave some areas without electricity for about a week
and other, unspecified areas for four to six months.
"The worst-case scenario for Puerto Rico, in particular, is that if the storm tracks southwards, then the island could get really battered," said Al Jazeera's Andy Gallacher, reporting from the capital, San Juan.
Source: Al Jazeera and news agencies
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