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Deadly devastation as Irma rips through Caribbean

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Marigot: Hurricane Irma on Thursday slashed its way through the Caribbean towards the United States, transforming tropical island paradises into scenes of death and ruin.


Wielding monster winds and pounding rain, the rare Category 5 hurricane was on a potential collision course with southern Florida, where at-risk areas were being evacuated.


“It will be truly devastating,” warned the head of the US Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), Brock Long. “The entire southeastern United States better wake up and pay attention.”


Irma churned westward through the Caribbean, packing winds of up to 295 kilometres per hour. French weather experts said Irma had raged at peak intensity for more than 33 hours, making it the longest-lasting superstorm since satellite monitoring began in the 1970s.


Devastation was left in the storm’s wake. The international Red Cross said 1.2 million people had already been hit by Irma, a number that could rise to 26 million.


On many islands, roofs were ripped off buildings as if by a giant’s hand, shipping containers were tossed aside like matchsticks and debris flung far and wide, and airports, sea ports and mobile phone networks were knocked out.


St Martin, a pristine island resort divided between France and the Netherlands, suffered the full fury of the storm.


France, in a toll revised downwards, said four had died and 50 were injured, two of them seriously. Sixty per cent of homes were so damaged that they were uninhabitable. Prime Minister Edouard Philippe described the disaster as “unimaginable and unprecedented.”


“The work will be long, emotions will run deep and the sadness will be great,” he said.


The Netherlands said it was racing to provide food and water for 40,000 people over the next five days, while France said more than 100,000 packages of combat rations were en route. A 200-member French team flew in to Guadeloupe to coordinate rescue efforts, headed by Overseas Territories Minister Annick Girardin.


Britain said it was sending two warships to help victims in the Caribbean, and earmarking £12 million ($15.7 million) in aid. The first vessel was expected to reach affected territories on Thursday.


Speaking to Dutch broadcaster RTL, Koen, a 20-year-old who lives in the town of Voorhout of St Martin, said he was shocked by what he saw.


“There is huge damage. Sand has been blown over everything. Everything is destroyed.”


Irma also laid waste to Barbuda, part of the twin island nation of Antigua and Barbuda, which suffered “absolute devastation” with up to 30 per cent of properties demolished, Prime Minister Gaston Browne said.


“Barbuda now is literally rubble,” he said. “These storms are more ferocious, they are coming in greater frequency — evidence that climate change is real,” Browne added in an interview with CNN.


One person is known to have died on the small island of 1,600 inhabitants, apparently a child whose family was trying to get to safer ground.


On the island of Barbados, a 16-year-old professional surfer named Zander Venezia died while trying to ride a monster wave generated by the storm, the World Surf League said.


More than half of Puerto Rico’s population of three million was without power, with rivers breaking their banks in the centre and north of the island where Governor Ricardo Rossello activated the National Guard and opened storm shelters sufficient for up to 62,000 people.


Irma was expected to hit the northern edges of the Dominican Republic and Haiti later on Thursday, continuing past eastern Cuba before veering north towards Florida.


US President Donald Trump has already declared a state of emergency for Puerto Rico, the US Virgin Islands and Florida.


With forecasters warning of catastrophe, including sea-level surges of up to 25 feet above normal tide levels, people evacuated tourist areas and packed into shelters across an area stretching as far north as Florida.


— AFP


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