Embed from Getty Images

Last night, Hurricane Maria followed on the heels of not one, but two storms to already batter the Caribbean this fall, leaving a wake of destruction on the islands  of Dominica and Guadeloupe.

Maria, a Category 5 storm, was upgraded  from a tropical storm to a hurricane in just over a day, and is one of the fastest intensifying hurricanes ever recorded, NBC News meteorologist Bill Karins said.

Meteorologists forecasted that the storm is expected to hit the Virgin Islands by Tuesday afternoon and Puerto Rico late Tuesday, still as a Category 5. They warned the storm could be “potentially catastrophic” and leave parts of the US territories completely “uninhabitable for months.”

Read More: Hurricane-Battered Cuba Has Sent 750 Doctors to Other Caribbean Islands to Help After Irma

Hurricane warnings are now in effect for Puerto Rico, its satellite islands of Vieques and Culebra, and the US Virgin Islands.  

Dominica, on the other hand, had very little time to prepare for “the strongest storm of their lifetimes,” Karins said.

The prime minister of Dominica, Roosevelt Skerrit, wrote in a Facebook post that his roof had been blown off, that his home was flooded, and that he was “at the complete mercy of the hurricane” after Maria made landfall late Monday night.

“Initial reports are of widespread devastation,” Skerrit wrote in a later post after his rescue. “So far we have lost all what money can buy and replace. So far the winds have swept away the roofs of almost every person I have spoken to or otherwise made contact with.”  

Read More: These Caribbean Islands Are Running Out of Food and Water in the Aftermath of Hurricane Irma

As of early Tuesday morning, phone and internet signals on the island nation of 72,000 appeared to be down, as well as radio. Airports and seaports will likely be shut down for days, Skerrit warned.

The immediate priority, however, is to deploy rescue missions and provide medical care to those injured and trapped in the rubble, Skerrit said.

“I am honestly not preoccupied with the physical damage at this time,” he added. “We will need help my friend, we will need help of all kinds.”

As daylight brought with it destruction and disaster, the prime minister has solicited the support of “friendly nations and organizations.”

Traditionally a small farming nation, Dominica’s economy is largely based on its agricultural sector, which is at risk of destruction from unpredictable storms. In 2007, Hurricane Dean, a Category 5, struck and caused the island nearly $60 million worth of damage to farmland and homes.

That’s nearly 24% of the country’s GDP.

The damage led to large cuts in funding to several sectors across the nation, including education and medical care. As a result, today, an average of 50% of Dominica’s children live in poverty.  

Global Citizen campaigns on health and sanitation, and urges governments to provide aid, especially in times of crises. You can take action here.

The governor of the US Virgin Islands has suspended all Hurricane Irma recovery efforts to shift the focus on preparing for Maria, and US President Donald Trump declared states of emergency in both US Caribbean territories on Monday.

Embed from Getty Images

Read More: This Is Hurricane Irma: Photos of the Biggest Storm the Atlantic Has Seen

The Coast Guard is moving personnel and aircrafts to both territories in preparation for storm surges forecast to be as high as nine feet, reported NBC News.  

Meanwhile, British and Dutch foreign ministers have met with the United Nations’ Under-Secretary General for the Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator in New York to ask for financial help to repair damages from Irma, which killed at least 37, and any hurricanes that follow.

So far, the UN has pledged nearly $14 million to Caribbean islands.

“We will continue to stand in solidarity with the people of the Caribbean to ensure maximum support is available to the commendable national and regional efforts,” the Under-Secretary General said.

News

Umwelt schützen

Category 5 Hurricane Maria Just Devastated the Tiny Island of Dominica and Is Heading Toward Puerto Rico

Ein Beitrag von Gabriella Canal