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Hurricane leaves trail of destruction in Florida

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Hurricane Ian inundated cities, turned out the lights on millions of residents and left migrants from an overturned boat missing on Thursday as Florida assessed damage from what the state governor de-scribed as a “500-year flood event.” Officials launched a major emergency response after one of the most intense US storms in years, with helicopter crews plucking survivors from barrier islands slammed by a deluge that saw storm surges crash through beachfront towns and horizontal rain pound communities for hours.

After an initial look at the breathtaking destruc-tion, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis said the coastal city of Fort Myers and adjacent Cape Coral were “really inundated and really devastated” by the storm. He said there were “two unconfirmed fatalities” that were likely linked to the hurricane.

The National Hurricane Center (NHC) down-graded Ian to a tropical storm on Thursday, but said it was causing “catastrophic flooding” and forecast further “life-threatening” floods, storm surge and high winds in central and eastern Florida as well as Georgia and South Carolina.

The US Border Patrol said a boat carrying mi-grants sank at sea during the hurricane, leaving 20 missing. Four Cubans swam to shore in the Florida Keys islands and the coast guard rescued three oth-ers.

Ian also menaced the city of Orlando and the nearby Disney theme parks, which were shuttered. Ian’s savagery was most evident along Florida’s west coast, including Punta Gorda, which was plunged into darkness after the storm wiped out power.

Howling winds toppled trees, pulled chunks out of roofs, and turned debris into dangerous projectiles whipping through town.

Punta Gorda urvivor Joe Ketcham, 70, told this news agency of the “relentless” banging of metal and his fears about what was to come as the hurricane battered his home.President Joe Biden declared a “major disaster” in Florida, a move that frees up federal funding for storm relief. DeSantis meanwhile warned that broad swathes of Florida remained under threat.

“The amount of water that’s been rising, and will continue today even as the storm is passing, is basically a 500-year flood event,” he told a press conference.

Two barrier islands near Fort Myers, Pine Island and Sanibel Island, popular with vacationers, were essentially cut off when the storm damaged cause-ways to the mainland.

“The coast guard has been performing rescue missions on the barrier islands consistently since the wee hours of the morning,” DeSantis added. Ian made landfall as an extremely powerful hurricane just after 3pm on Wednesday on the barrier island of Cayo Costa, west of Fort Myers.

Dramatic television footage showed floodwaters surging into beachfront homes, submerging roads and sweeping away vehicles.

The NHC said Ian’s maximum sustained winds reached 150 miles (240 kilometers) per hour when it landed as a Category 4 hurricane — just shy of the maximum Category 5. As a tropical storm, wind dropped to a maximum 65 miles per hour on Thurs-day.

Some 2.6 million of Florida’s 11 million homes and businesses were without power Thursday, ac-cording to the PowerOutage tracking website.

Mandatory evacuation orders had been issued in many areas, with several dozen shelters set up. Air-ports stopped all commercial flights, and cruise ship companies delayed or canceled voyages.

The storm was set to move off the east-central coast of Florida later Thursday and emerge into the Atlantic before blowing through Georgia and the Carolinas to the north.—AFP

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