Kingston airport reopens to flights carrying aid, with some Jamaican towns underwater and power lines down as storm’s overall death toll climbs to 44
Kingston, Jamaica’s capital, was spared the worst damage and the main international airport has reopened to allow flights carrying critical aid to land. Officials said some towns were underwater and power lines and mobile network towers were down in much of the south-west.
“The devastation is enormous,” said the transport minister, Daryl Vaz.
Melissa’s overall confirmed death toll rose to 44 on Thursday, according to official reports.
In Jamaica, the toll was at least 19 but search and rescue efforts were continuing, said the information minister, Dana Morris Dixon. The island’s toll had earlier been four.
Jamaica was hit first and hardest this week when Melissa made landfall on Tuesday. It was the country’s strongest hurricane since records began in 1851. The storm carried sustained winds of 185mph, far above the minimum for a category 5 storm, the strongest classification for hurricanes.
The British government said on Thursday that it was chartering flights to the island. “The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office has chartered a limited number of flights from Jamaica for British nationals who are unable to fly home commercially,” it said in a statement.
Hurricane Melissa has been intensely destructive, estimated to have caused billions of dollars, but accurate forecasting and government advice meant many people who were able to reach shelters were protected.
In Haiti, 25 people including 10 children died in flood waters when a river overflowed its banks. “It is a sad moment for the country,” said Laurent Saint-Cyr, the head of the transitional presidential council of Haiti, the Caribbean’s most populous nation.
In eastern Cuba, authorities had evacuated about 735,000 people from their homes as the storm approached. It hit on Wednesday and by Thursday there was no official estimate of the damage and no deaths had been reported there.
Photos from Santiago de Cuba, the province in the south-east where the storm passed over, showed people surrounded by tree branches and debris.
Across the Bahamas archipelago, which Melissa has now passed, the government had flown out nearly 1,500 people in one of its largest evacuation operations.
Despite losing some power, Melissa was still carrying winds of close to 105 miles an hour (165kph), according to the US National Hurricane Center, downgraded to a category 2 storm but still a hurricane.
About 700 miles north-east of the storm’s position on Thursday, Bermudians prepared for its approach, expected by the evening local time. The hurricane is expected to significantly weaken on Friday.
Source: www.theguardian.com

