Flooded homes are seen after the passage of Hurricane Melissa in Howard Acres neighbourhood in St. Elizabeth, Jamaica. Photo / Ricardo Makyn, AFP
Flooded homes are seen after the passage of Hurricane Melissa in Howard Acres neighbourhood in St. Elizabeth, Jamaica. Photo / Ricardo Makyn, AFP
Hurricane Melissa bore down on the Bahamas after cutting a path of destruction through the Caribbean, leaving 30 people dead or missing in Haiti and parts of Jamaica and Cuba in ruins.
Somewhat weakened but still threatening, Melissa will bring damaging winds and flooding rains to the Bahamas on Wednesday(local time) before moving on to Bermuda late on Thursday, according to the US National Hurricane Centre (NHC).
“In the Bahamas, residents should remain sheltered,” it said, while in Bermuda, “preparations should be under way and be completed before anticipated first occurrence of tropical-storm-force winds”.
As Melissa left Cuban shores, residents started assessing their losses, with President Miguel Diaz-Canel quantifying the damage as “extensive”.
In the east of the communist island battling its worst economic crisis in decades, people struggled through flooded and collapsed homes and inundated streets.
She managed to save her TV set and a few small appliances from her flooded home.
“It’s not easy to lose... the little you have,” Reyes told AFP.
‘Disaster area’
Men salvage belongings from the rubble of a home after it collapsed during Hurricane Melissa's passage through Santiago de Cuba, Cuba. Photo / Yamil Lage, AFP
Pope Leo offered prayers from the Vatican, while the United States said it was in contact with the governments of Jamaica, Haiti, the Dominican Republic and the Bahamas.
“We have rescue and response teams heading to affected areas along with critical lifesaving supplies,” US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on X, without mentioning ideological foe Cuba.
The UK Government announced £2.5 million ($5.7m) in emergency funding for the region.
In Jamaica, where some parts are still recovering from Hurricane Beryl last year, UN resident coordinator Dennis Zulu told reporters Melissa had brought “tremendous, unprecedented devastation of infrastructure, of property, roads, network connectivity”.
Prime Minister Andrew Holness declared the tropical island famed for tourism a “disaster area”.
Many homes were destroyed and about 25,000 people sought refuge in shelters.
“Our teams are on the ground working tirelessly to rescue, restore, and bring relief where it’s needed most... To every Jamaican, hold strong. We will rebuild, we will recover,” Holness said on X.
Information Minister Dana Morris Dixon told CNN officials had been unable to confirm reports of deaths “because we have not been able to get to some of the hardest hit areas”.
She added work was ongoing to reopen the airport at Montego Bay so an estimated 25,000 tourists caught in the storm “will soon be able to leave if they need to”.
‘Everything is gone’
A man walks with a shovel in hand over rubble on Main Street in Santa Cruz, St. Elizabeth, Jamaica. Photo / Ricardo Makyn, AFP
At least 20 people in southern Haiti, including 10 children, were killed in floods caused as the hurricane shaved past earlier in the week, according to civil defence agency head Emmanuel Pierre.
Ten more were missing.
“People have been killed, houses have been swept away by the water,” resident Steeve Louissaint told AFP in the coastal town of Petit-Goave, where the Digue River burst its banks.
Hurricane Melissa tied the 1935 record for the most intense storm ever to make landfall when it battered Jamaica on Tuesday, according to the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
In Seaford Town, farmer and businessman Christopher Hacker saw his restaurant and nearby banana plantations flattened.
“Everything is gone,” he told AFP. “It will take a lot to recover from this.”
‘A brutal reminder’
The full extent of Melissa’s damage is not yet clear. A comprehensive assessment could take days with communications networks disrupted across the region.
UN Climate Change Executive Secretary Simon Stiell said such mega-storms “are a brutal reminder of the urgent need to step up climate action on all fronts, as they bring massive human and economic costs in every part of the world, and those costs grow faster and bigger each year.”
Because of climate change, warmer sea surface temperatures inject more energy into storms, boosting their intensity with stronger winds and more precipitation.
“Human-caused climate change is making all of the worst aspects of Hurricane Melissa even worse,” said climate scientist Daniel Gilford.