Melissa kills 25 in Haiti, nearly 30 total as hurricane batters Caribbean

by · KSL.com

KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • Major Hurricane Melissa left a trail of destruction in the Caribbean on Wednesday.
  • Jamaica faces nearly $22 billion in damages and a lengthy recovery, while 25 people were killed in Haiti due to flooding.
  • Cuba evacuated 735,000 people as the storm caused significant agricultural and infrastructural damage.

HAVANA — Hurricane Melissa barreled through the Caribbean on Wednesday after thrashing Cuba's second-biggest city, isolating hundreds of rural communities, unleashing devastation in Jamaica and drenching Haiti, where at least 25 were killed.

Melissa struck Jamaica on Tuesday as the strongest-ever hurricane to directly hit its shores, with sustained winds of 185 mph, well above the minimum strength for a Category 5, the strongest classification for hurricanes.

As of 3 p.m. MDT on Wednesday, Melissa was a Category 1 hurricane moving northeast through the Bahamas archipelago, which completed the air evacuation of nearly 1,500 people early.

The storm did not directly hit Haiti, the Caribbean's most populous nation, but it hurled days of rain over the island nation. Authorities reported at least 25 deaths, largely due to floods in Petit-Goave, a coastal town 40 miles west of the capital, where a river burst its banks.

At least 10 children were killed there, and 12 people remain missing there, Haiti's disaster management agency said.

In Haiti, where a gang conflict has displaced over 1.3 million people, authorities said more than 1,000 homes were flooded. People living in makeshift camps said the flooding made it impossible to sit or sleep, and said the government and aid groups were slow to bring supplies.

Fortune Vital, a displaced man in Les Cayes, said he was separated from his family, which already lacked sufficient food. "If the hurricane comes on top of all the problems we already have, we'll simply die," he said.

'Like missiles blowing through glass'

On Tuesday, Melissa made landfall in southwestern Jamaica, devastating areas already battered by last year's Hurricane Beryl. Forecaster AccuWeather estimated Melissa cost $22 billion in damages and economic loss in Jamaica alone, and that rebuilding could take a decade or more.

Local authorities said floodwaters had washed up four bodies in the southwestern agricultural hub of St. Elizabeth. About 77% of Jamaica was without electricity, authorities said on Wednesday morning. The capital, Kingston, was spared the worst damage, and its main airport was set to reopen Thursday.

Debris lies scattered at a hotel in Montego Bay, Jamaica, Wednesday. Accuweather estimates Jamaica faces $22 billion in damage due to Hurricane Melissa.Sandra Stojanovic, Reuters

Prime Minister Andrew Holness visited Black River Hospital, the only public hospital in St. Elizabeth, where aerial footage showed the wrecks of buildings, roofs blown off, power cables knocked down and fields strewn with rubble.

Hospital workers there said the building showed some significant damage, and staff told the prime minister they spent the night fearing for their own families while working by flashlight to care for patients.

"It was the most terrifying experience in all my life," a hospital worker said. "It is beyond imagining. At one point, it was as if missiles were blowing through the glass."

Jamaica's government gave an "all clear" to begin recovery efforts, but said it would keep emergency shelters open through the week as people kept coming in from devastated homes.

Local government minister Desmond McKenzie said over 25,000 people had been admitted. "No one must be turned back from the shelters," he said.

Mass evacuations in Cuba

Melissa was a still major Category 3 when it hit Cuba overnight with winds of 120 mph, landing in Guama, a rural, mountainous area some 25 miles west of Santiago de Cuba, the island's second-most populous city.

At least 241 communities remained isolated and without communications on Wednesday following the storm's passage across Santiago province, according to preliminary media reports, affecting as many as 140,000 residents.

Across eastern Cuba, authorities evacuated around 735,000 people as the storm approached. Most remained in emergency centers.

No deaths were reported on Wednesday, but President Miguel Diaz-Canel said the island had suffered extensive damage and warned of vigilance as rains continue to lash the region.

Yurca Melo removes cables from a fallen electrical post on a street in the aftermath of Hurricane Melissa in Santiago, Cuba, Wednesday. The hurricane made landfall early Wednesday in rural Guama.Alexandre Meneghini, Reuters

"A major hurricane landfall in the dark is incredibly dangerous," AccuWeather lead hurricane expert Alex DaSilva said.

"The storm lost wind intensity as it interacted with the mountains of southeast Cuba, but the forced upward motion of the air over the mountainous terrain is squeezing out tremendous amounts of rainfall."

Cuban officials also warned of severe impact on crops ahead of the Northern Hemisphere's winter growing season.

Cuba was already suffering from food, fuel, electricity and medicine shortages that have complicated life, prompting record-breaking emigration since 2021.

On Wednesday, the U.N. General Assembly again voted overwhelmingly for the U.S. to end its Cold War-era economic embargo on the communist-run country.

Loss and damage

Meteorologists at AccuWeather said Melissa ranked as the third-most intense hurricane observed in the Caribbean, after Wilma in 2005 and Gilbert in 1988 — the last major storm to directly hit Jamaica.

But scientists say hurricanes are intensifying faster with greater frequency as a result of warming ocean waters caused by greenhouse gas emissions. Many Caribbean leaders have called on wealthy, heavy-polluting nations to provide reparations in the form of aid or debt relief to tropical island countries.

The Caribbean Community Climate Change Centre, a branch of regional bloc CARICOM, issued a statement in solidarity of those affected by Hurricane Melissa and called for stronger efforts to curb climate change.

It said Melissa's rapid intensification, fueled by record-breaking Caribbean sea temperatures, underscored need for the U.N.'s "loss and damage" fund to be scaled up.

The fund was established in 2023 as a mechanism for developing nations to quickly and reliably access financing to recover from more frequent extreme weather events. However, donations from wealthy, polluting nations have fallen short of targets, and the U.S. withdrew from its board in March.

The devastation caused by Melissa drew an outpouring of support from across the world, with some countries pledging support in the form of cash, food aid and rescue teams.

In Montego Bay, a popular Jamaican tourist destination, a resident told Reuters the water reached her waist and rescuers had to break into her home to save her and her child.

"All the trees that my dad planted, all of them are gone," she said.

Contributing: Zahra Burton, Maria Alejandra Cardona, Steven Aristil, Herbert Villarraga and Brendan O'Boyle

Photos

Heavy machinery working in the aftermath of Hurricane Melissa in Santa Cruz, Jamaica, Wednesday. The hurricane left at least 25 people dead in Haiti, and 30 in total, after it roared through the Caribbean.Octavio Jones, Reuters
Val Mitchell uses a machete to help clear a downed tree in Manchester, Jamaica, Wednesday. Hurricane Melissa left at least 25 people dead in Haiti, and 30 in total, after it roared through the Caribbean.Octavio Jones, Reuters
Debris lies scattered at a hotel in Montego Bay, Jamaica, Wednesday. Hurricane Melissa left at least 25 people dead in Haiti, and 30 in total, after it roared through the Caribbean.Sandra Stojanovic, Reuters
People pass by debris from a wall in the aftermath of Hurricane Melissa, in Santiago, Cuba, Wednesday. The hurricane left at least 25 people dead in Haiti, and 30 in total, after it roared through the Caribbean.Alexandre Meneghini, Reuters
The aftermath of Hurricane Melissa in Les Cayes, Haiti, Wednesday. The hurricane left at least 25 people dead in Haiti, and 30 in total, after it roared through the Caribbean.Patrice Noel, Reuters
Yurca Melo removes cables from a fallen electrical post on a street in Santiago, Cuba, Wednesday. Hurricane Melissa left at least 25 people dead in Haiti, and 30 in total, after it roared through the Caribbean.Alexandre Meneghini, Reuters
A man uses a chainsaw to clear fallen branches in Spur Tree, Manchester, Jamaica, Wednesday. Hurricane Melissa left at least 25 people dead in Haiti, and 30 in total, after it roared through the Caribbean.Octavio Jones, Reuters

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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