Hurricane Irma wreaks major damage in Caribbean
Irma as seen from space at 11:30 GMT on Wednesday |
Hurricane Irma has destroyed buildings and caused major flooding
on several French island territories in the Caribbean.
The four "most solid" buildings on Saint Martin,
shared by France and the Netherlands, were destroyed, French Interior Minister
Gérard Collomb said.
Communications between Paris and Saint Martin and Saint
Barthélemy are down.
The category five hurricanes, the highest possible level,
has sustained wind speeds reaching 300km/h (185mph).
The most powerful Atlantic storm in a decade first hit
Antigua and Barbuda, before moving on to Saint Martin and Saint Barthélemy
(also known as St Barts).
It is expected to mov
e on towards Puerto Rico and the
Dominican Republic. In the US, Florida's Key West area has ordered a mandatory
evacuation, with landfall expected at the weekend.
The French government said earlier it was worried about
thousands of people who had refused to seek shelter on the islands.
In a statement, the interior minister said France was
sending three emergency teams to the islands, two from France and one from
Guadeloupe.
"The winds are going to turn in the other direction and
there's a risk of further damage," Mr Collomb said.
There was no news of possible casualties, he said, adding
that "more rustic structures" had "probably been completely or
partially destroyed".
French Overseas Territories Minister Annick Girardin said
the hurricane had caused major flooding in low-lying areas, and coastlines were
being "battered extremely violently" by the sea.
Some 40,000 people live in the French part of Saint Martin,
with around the same number estimated to live on the Dutch side. About 9,000
people live on Saint Barthélemy.
'We don't know'
Local reports suggest Antigua escaped major damage but the
situation on Barbuda is unclear. The Antigua Observer said it had received
initial reports of roofs being blown off on both islands.
"We really don't know what's happening," Antigua
radio journalist Gemma Handy told the BBC.
"We're trying to be positive, but nobody's really going
to relax over here. It's a very close-knit community of just 90,000 people.
Most people live here on Antigua, there's about 2,000 on Barbuda, so lots of
people right now are waiting very anxiously for word from their relatives over
there."
Thousands of people have been evacuated from at-risk areas
across the Caribbean. Residents have flocked to shops for food, water, and
emergency supplies.
Airports have closed on several islands which are popular
holiday destinations, and authorities have urged people to go to public
shelters.
US President Donald Trump has declared a state of emergency
for Florida, Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands, mobilising federal disaster
relief efforts.
In Florida's Key West, visitors will be required to leave on
Wednesday morning, with residents due to follow in the evening.
"Watching Hurricane closely," Mr Trump tweeted on
Wednesday. "My team, which has done, and is doing, such a good job in
Texas, is already in Florida. No rest for the weary!"
Parts of Texas and Louisiana are dealing with the damage
done by Hurricane Harvey in late August. But it is not yet clear
what impact Hurricane Irma might have on the US mainland.
A third tropical storm, Jose, has formed further out in the
Atlantic behind Irma, and is expected to become a hurricane later on Wednesday,
according to the US National Hurricane Center.
Seeing multiple storms developing in the same area of the
Atlantic in close succession is not uncommon.
Rarer though is the strength of the hurricanes, with Harvey
expected to make landfall in the US as a category four.
There have never been two category four storms making
landfall on the US mainland during the same season, since records began.
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