Hurricane Matthew: 'Life-threatening flash floods and mudslides' expected
Story highlights
- Hurricane Matthew is expected to pummel weak infrastructure in Haiti and Cuba
- The United States is evacuating nonessential personnel from its naval base at Guantanamo Bay
(CNN)A ferocious hurricane packing 145-mph winds is prompting hundreds of Guantanamo Bay employees to evacuate and threatens to wreak havoc on Haiti and Jamaica.
Hurricane Matthew is expected to dump torrential rainfall on Jamaica and Haiti on Sunday evening before making landfall Monday.
"This
rainfall will produce life-threatening flash floods and mudslides," the
National Weather Service said Sunday. "Preparations to protect life and
property should be rushed to completion."
A direct hit on Haiti could be disastrous, with much of the country's infrastructure still weak after the 2010 earthquake that killed more than 200,000 people. Haiti is also recovering from a cholera outbreak after the quake that killed another 10,000.
"Water
systems are at risk as hurricane #Matthew's approaching," physician and
researcher Keddy Moise tweeted. "Months of work fighting cholera could
be lost."
The storm could also be
brutal for Cuba, where many houses appear too weak to withstand a
hurricane, CNN's Patrick Oppmann said Sunday.
"Just
driving through Santiago today, I was struck by the number of people
living in housing that looks like it's hundreds of years old," Oppmann
said. "Wooden roofs, very old housing that looks like it could blow away
in a heavy rainstorm -- not to mention a Category 4 storm."
As
for the United States, "it is too early to determine if Matthew will
directly impact the US," the National Weather Service said Sunday. "But
this dangerous storm will be closely monitored."
Guantanamo Bay employees evacuated
The
United States is moving 700 employees and their families from its naval
base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, on Sunday. Military planes were to
airlift people from the base to cities in Florida. Family pets will join
the mandatory evacuations, base officials said.
Those getting evacuated are mostly nonessential personnel. There are no plans to evacuate the 61 prisoners detained at the facility that holds terror suspects.
"Remaining personnel and their families will be taking shelter in their homes or designated locations," base officials said.
It's unclear when the evacuees will be brought back, officials said.
Epic rainfall, brutal strength
In
the next few days, Matthew is expected to dump 15 to 25 inches of rain
on southern Haiti, with as much as 40 inches in some areas, the National
Weather service said.
Eastern Jamaica, the Dominican Republic and eastern Cuba will get pummeled with as much as 25 inches in some areas.
Matthew
briefly strengthened Friday night into a Category 5 storm, becoming the
strongest hurricane in the Atlantic Ocean since Felix in 2007. But it
is now a Category 4 storm, meaning it carries winds between 130 and 156
mph (209 to 251 kph).
"Some
fluctuations in intensity are possible this weekend, but Matthew is
expected to remain a powerful hurricane through Monday," the National
Hurricane Center said.
Bracing for a monstrous storm
In Jamaica, storm shelters opened as the nation braced for its first major hurricane since Gilbert in 1988.
Marcia Forbes, a business owner in Kingston, told CNN she was preparing for a rough couple of days.
She
waited in line to fill her car with gasoline, brought in her potted
plants and filled her bathtub with water in case service gets
interrupted during the storm. She also placed sandbags against the
shutters of her multimedia company and covered her office computers with
plastic.
"Having lived through
Hurricane Gilbert in 1988, I know what a Category 3 hurricane can do,
(much) less a Category 4 or 5," she told CNN.
"Everyone in my community is taking this hurricane seriously and getting their homes shuttered up."
After pummeling Jamaica and Haiti, Matthew could slam Cuba, the Bahamas and South Florida later this week, forecasters said.
Although
weather models show the outskirts of Matthew just scraping the southern
part of Florida, Rick Knabb, director of the National Hurricane Center
in Miami, urged Floridians to prepare and buy supplies.
Jamaica
Prime Minister Andrew Holness told journalists that while the hurricane
posed a great risk to lives and property that it could also blow the
economy off course, The Gleaner, a Jamaican newspaper, reported.
"The
biggest concern is the impact on the economy. ... This weather event
could derail our economic program," the newspaper quoted Holness as
saying Saturday while touring areas that could be most affected by
Matthew. "We are ensuring that all government agencies understand that
they have a role in the speedy recovery. That speedy recovery will
ensure that our economy does not suffer unnecessarily."
"Of
course, on a local level, community level, we expect that we will see
significant damage to property and dislocation and human suffering that
will come from such an event if we do not prepare. It could be
significant."
Canceled flights
IBC Airways has canceled all flights Monday to and from Guantanamo Bay because of the approaching storm.
American Airlines, Delta Air Lines,
JetBlue, Spirit Airlines and Fly Jamaica Airways issued travel warnings
for their customers, saying change fees may be waived for flights to
some destinations.
The US State Department issued a travel warning Sunday, urging citizens in Haiti to leave quickly if they can.
"Given the approaching hurricane, there is limited time available for a safe departure," the State Department said.
"We
recommend US citizens depart Haiti if possible and work with commercial
air carriers to leave prior to the arrival of the hurricane. Airports
will close once conditions deteriorate and safe travel is not possible. "
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