Hurricane Melissa devastates Jamaica: See photos of the aftermath
· Yahoo NewsHurricane Melissa continues to leave catastrophic damage in its wake.
The hurricane made landfall near New Hope, Jamaica, on Tuesday as a Category 5 storm — the strongest in the country’s recorded history — with winds of 185 mph. It then made a second landfall as a Category 3 storm in Cuba on Wednesday morning, leaving behind “extensive damage,” Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel Bermúdez said in a statement.
Melissa, now a Category 2 storm, has since moved offshore and is heading for the Bahamas, per an advisory from the National Hurricane Center. It’s expected to pass near the west of Bermuda on Thursday night.
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Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness declared the country a “disaster area” late Tuesday, amid reports of significant damage, including widespread flooding, power outages and blocked roads.
At a news conference on Wednesday, Dana Morris Dixon, Jamaica’s information minister, said Melissa had left 77% of the island without power. Desmond McKenzie, Jamaica’s minister of local government and community development, also said that more than 25,000 people were in shelters across the island.
“It’s not going to be an easy road, Jamaica,” he said.
Richard Vernon, the mayor of tourist hot spot Montego Bay, told BBC News on Wednesday that the city had been split in two by floodwaters. Though no deaths have been reported there so far, Vernon said his main concern Wednesday morning was to “check if everybody is alive.”
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“Once the wind subsided, we started to get a lot of heavy rain and that has led to massive floods right across the city,” Vernon said. “One side of the city is now cut off from the other due to roads being inundated by flood water.”
While a tropical storm warning has been discontinued for Jamaica, the country’s government warned of the potential for “further flash flooding and additional landslides” through Wednesday night.
Jamaican officials on Wednesday confirmed the island’s first death since Hurricane Melissa made landfall. The storm has been blamed for dozens of deaths across Jamaica, Haiti and the Dominican Republic.
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