Caribbean fears for coastal families as
Hurricane Matthew gets close
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[October 03, 2016]
By Makini Brice and Gabriel Stargardter
LES CAYES, Haiti/KINGSTON (Reuters) - Haiti
and Jamaica urged residents in vulnerable coastal areas to evacuate and
Cuba suspended flights on Sunday as bands of rain from Hurricane
Matthew, the strongest storm to menace Caribbean nations since 2007,
drenched the Jamaican capital.
Matthew's slow-moving center was expected to come near southwestern
Haiti and Jamaica on Monday as a major storm bringing winds of 145 miles
per hour (230 kph) and life-threatening rain, the U.S. National
Hurricane Center said.
Eastern Cuba would also feel bands of fierce wind and rain on Monday,
the agency said.
“We are very worried by the situation," Haitian Interior Minister
Francois Anick Joseph said at an operations center in Port-au-Prince.
"We want everybody to know that it is real."
He said 1,300 shelters had been set up, with the capacity to hold
340,000 people. Some two thousand people refused to leave their seaside
homes in the coastal town of La Savanne and the government was ready to
use force if needed, Anick Joseph said.
One person was swept away by high waves on Saturday despite government
warnings to stay out of the sea, he said.
On Sunday afternoon, nobody had arrived at the largest shelter in La
Savanne, a high school with the capacity to fit 600 people, except some
boys playing basketball there.
Up to 40 inches (101 cm) of rain could fall on parts of southern Haiti
and the prime minister's office issued a red alert warning for
landslides, high waves and floods.
"Preparations to protect life and property should be rushed to
completion," the hurricane center said.
In Kingston, Jamaica, major roads and waterways flooded as the first
bands from Matthew lashed the island. Cars stalled as rain-drenched
drivers tried to push vehicles through streets that flooded within
minutes after the downpour started.
In the nearby town of Port Royal, fishermen scorned government calls to
leave for shelters.
Matthew was about 255 miles (415 km) southeast of Kingston on Sunday
night and moving northwest at 5 mph (7 kph), with a turn to the north
expected overnight. The hurricane center ranked it at Category 4 on the
five-step Saffir-Simpson scale of hurricane intensity.
"Slow motion is almost always a bad thing for any land area impacted,"
said John Cangialosi, a hurricane specialist at the center. Matthew was
expected to remain a powerful hurricane into Tuesday, the center said.
Matthew is the most powerful hurricane to form over the Atlantic since
Felix in 2007.
Haiti is the poorest country in the Americas, and a combination of weak
government and precarious living conditions for most of its people makes
it particularly vulnerable to natural disasters. More than 200,000
people were killed when a 7-magnitude earthquake struck Haiti in 2010.
"WE CAN'T LIVE"
Despite worries about potential storm devastation, life in the southern
Haitian town of Les Cayes went on much as normal. One of two restaurants
at the tourist port was open but employee Jonel Glezil said there were
no visitors on Sunday.
Glezil, 28, said he was unprepared for the storm and worried about
damage to the restaurant and the town of 70,000 residents, where streets
are lined by tall, colorful houses and coconut and mango trees.
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Residents stand on a pier ahead of Hurricane Matthew in Les Cayes,
Haiti, October 2, 2016. REUTERS/Andres Martinez Casares
"When the hurricane comes, there is no food in my house," he said as
heavy waves driven by high winds broke over the shore. "We can't
live."
In Jamaica, which could get up to 15 inches (38 cm) of rain, Prime
Minister Andrew Holness told Reuters outside his office that his
government was mobilized and about 80 percent of the 2.7 million
Jamaicans were ready for the storm.
"The damage will have an impact on our economic growth, which is
already fragile," he said, as the wind began to build. In
particular, agriculture, tourism and towns cut off by storm damage
and landslides would suffer, Holness said.
Kingston residents stocked up on canned food, water and batteries,
while banks and offices boarded their windows. Fishermen were told
not to go to sea.
In Cuba, where evacuations were under way, many flights were
suspended by noon on Sunday. In the seaside village of Siboney, near
Santiago de Cuba, villagers moved furniture to the safest houses.
Some left for evacuation centers and others were preparing shelters
in caves in the cliffs nearby.
"We chose this cave to protect us from cyclone Matthew," said
Eduardo Gallo, 40. "We have always hidden here, where we will be
protected from the storm."
Cuban President Raul Castro warned that Matthew was stronger than
Hurricane Sandy, which devastated Santiago de Cuba in 2012.
"We have to prepare as if it has twice the power of Sandy," the
Granma newspaper quoted Castro as saying on a visit to Santiago de
Cuba.
A few miles east, the United States was airlifting some 700 spouses
and children to Florida from its Guantanamo Bay naval base.
Prisoners and service personnel would remain.
Matthew could affect the Bahamas and the U.S. East Coast later in
the week, although forecasts so far out are often inaccurate. The
U.S. State Department issued travel warnings for the Bahamas,
Jamaica and Haiti and authorized government workers' relatives and
non-essential personnel to leave.
(Additional reporting by Roberta Rampton, Marc Frank and Rebekah
Kebede and Joseph Guyler Delva in Port-au-Prince; Writing by Frank
Jack Daniel and Letitia Stein; Editing by Bill Trott, Lisa Von Ahn
and Paul Tait)
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