Hurricane Matthew slams into western
Haiti with deadly waves
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[October 04, 2016]
By Makini Brice
LES CAYES, Haiti (Reuters) - The fiercest
Caribbean storm in almost a decade ripped into Haiti's southwestern
peninsula early on Tuesday, packing 145 mile-per-hour (230 kph) winds
and storm surges that killed at least one person and damaged homes.
The eye of the violent Category 4 storm was just 35 miles off the
western tip of Haiti at 5 a.m EDT, the U.S. National Hurricane Center
said, pounding coastal villages with strong gusts.
One man died when a wave crashed through his home in the beach town of
Port Salut, Haiti's civil protection service said. He had been too sick
to leave for a shelter, officials said.
Overnight, Haitians living in vulnerable coastal shacks on the Tiburon
Peninsula frantically sought shelter as Hurricane Matthew closed in,
bringing heavy rain and driving the ocean into seaside towns.
"This storm surge will also limit rainfall runoff in some places,
aggravating flooding, especially in coastal locations where swollen
rivers cannot drain," Weather Underground forecaster Jeff Masters said
in a blog.
Up to three feet of rain is forecast to fall over denuded hills prone to
flash floods and mudslides, threatening villages as well as shanty towns
in the capital Port-au-Prince, where heavy rain fell overnight.
"Life-threatening rain, wind and storm surges" was spreading over parts
of the country, the hurricane center said in its advisory.
The outer bands of the cyclone had already reached the area late on
Monday, flooding dozens of houses in the town of Les Anglais when the
ocean rose, the local mayor said. In the town of Les Cayes on the
southern coast, the wind bent trees and the power went out.
CHILDREN, PRISONERS MOVED
"We have gusts of wind hitting the whole area and the people have fled
to a shelter," said Les Anglais mayor Jean-Claude Despierre. In Tiburon,
another town nearby, the mayor said people who had been reluctant to
leave their homes also ran for cover when the sea rose.
"Everyone is trying to find a safe place to protect themselves, the
situation is very difficult," mayor Remiza Denize said, describing large
waves hitting the town.
Poor Haitians are often loath to leave home in the face of storms,
fearing their few belongings will be stolen.
Civil protection authorities said 130 children were evacuated by bus to
a high school in the capital from an orphanage in the shoreside Cite
Soleil slum, made up of tin shacks and open sewers and known as Haiti's
largest shanty town.
On the north coast, about 300 detainees were transferred from their
prison near the sea in the town of Jeremie, the interior ministry said.
The cyclone comes at a bad time for Haiti, where tens of thousands of
people still live in tents after a 2010 earthquake that killed upwards
of 200,000 people.
Cholera introduced by U.N. peacekeepers is expected to rise in the
October rainy season, and the country was due to hold a long-delayed
presidential election on Oct. 9.
The office of Interim President Jocelerme Privert said there was no
change to the election date.
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Families settle into their seats aboard a Boeing C-17A Globemaster
III aircraft for evacuation from Naval Station Guantanamo Bay ahead
of Hurricane Matthew, in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba October 2, 2016 in a
photo provided by the U.S. Navy. U.S. Navy/Capt. Frederick H.
Agee/Handout via Reuters
Crawling north at about 9 miles-per-hour (15 kph), the strongest
storm since Hurricane Felix in 2009 threatens to linger long enough
for its winds and rain to cause great damage in Haiti, where it will
spend much of the day before hitting Cuba and the Bahamas later on
Tuesday.
It will possibly reach Florida by Thursday as a major hurricane,
though weaker than at present, the hurricane Center said. Governor
Rick Scott declared a state of emergency for Florida on Monday,
designating resources for evacuations and shelters and putting the
National Guard on standby.
CUBA PREPARES
In Les Cayes about 150 people huddled without electricity or food in
the town's largest shelter, a school.
"Since yesterday we've had nothing ... We must sleep on the floor
... Everyone is hungry," said Erick Cange, 69 years old, a resident
of the La Savanne neighborhood surrounding the school.
The conditions in the shelter compared unfavorably with Haiti's
neighbor Cuba, where authorities spent days organizing teams of
volunteers to move residents to safety and secure property.
The storm is expected to make a direct hit later on Tuesday in the
province of Guantanamo, the disputed home to a U.S. Naval base and
military prison but also a small Cuban city.
"Food is guaranteed and we have a generator that will guarantee that
the kitchen keeps on working in case of a power cut," said Alexis
Iglesias, head of the evacuation committee at Guantanamo University
which was being used as shelter, where some 400 people were staying.
The U.S. Agency for International Development said on Monday it was
providing a combined $400,000 in aid to Haiti and Jamaica. The
agency said in a statement it had pre-positioned relief supplies and
was preparing to ship in additional supplies to the central
Caribbean.
(Reporting by Joseph Guyler Delva in Port-au-Prince and Maini Brice
in Les Cayes; Additional reporting by Sarah Marsh in Cuba and
Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee; Writing by Frank Jack Daniel; Editing
by Dominic Evans and Andrew Heavens)
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