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At 5 a.m. EDT (0900 GMT), Ike was located 85 miles (137 kilometers) south-southeast of Havana and was moving west at 13 mph (21 kph). It had maximum sustained winds near 80 mph (128 kph). On the narrow streets of Camaguey, falling utility poles crushed cars and the roaring wind transformed buildings of stone and brick into piles of rubble. Colonial columns were toppled and the ornate sculptures on the roofs of centuries-old buildings were smashed in the central Cuban city, a UNESCO world heritage site. "I have never seen anything like it in my life. So much force is terrifying," said Olga Alvarez, 70, huddling in her living room with her husband and teenage grandson. "We barely slept last night. It was just `boom, boom, boom.'" Delia Oliveras, 64, said it was the strongest hurricane her family has experienced. They fled to a covered patio as winds tore the roof from the living room. "This critter was angry, really angry," she said. Ike destroyed 300 homes and damaged hundreds more in the eastern city of Baracoa, said Luis Torres, president of the Civil Defense Council in Guantanamo province. Much of eastern Cuba was without electricity and phone service was spotty. The road between Santiago and Guantanamo was cut when a reservoir overflowed. State television said officials had taken measures to protect tourists at vulnerable seaside hotels, including about 10,000 foreigners at the Varadero resort, east of Havana.
[Associated
Press;
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