Tag: Hurricane Ian

  • Hurricane Ian: Woman killed by nail on birthday trip to Florida

    An Ohio woman, who went on a birthday trip to Florida with three other women, was killed by a nail when Hurricane Ian ravaged a home they were lodging in. According to WHIO-TV, the deceased, identified as Nishelle Harris-Miles, was in Fort Myers with her sister, cousin, and friend when the hurricane tore down the roof of their Airbnb.

    The fatal incident happened a week after the deceased mother turned 40. And she had traveled to the city with her three female companions to celebrate her new age.

    “We talked to them Tuesday [September 27] and we were actually on the phone with them,” Harris-Miles’ cousin told the news outlet. “We were getting them in good spirits and we were telling them to be safe and all that. And then Wednesday, we just didn’t hear back from them.”

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    Fort Myers was one of the Florida locations the hurricane severely hit. “Went for peace and came back broken, lost, confused, guilty,” LaQuitta Heard, who went on the trip, said.

    In an interview with WLWT, Chanel Maston, who is Harris-Miles’ cousin, also recalled the events leading to the tragic incident.

    “We strapped ourselves to each other with a sheet, laid on the mattress. That water came out that floor so fast, so quick. The roof was smashing us,” Maston said. “We tried to kick off the roof and lay on the mattress. It kicked off that roof, so that roof wouldn’t smash us and the roof went, and we went.”

    Maston also said they tried contacting authorities for help, but nobody responded. “We started calling people before the water really started rising,” she said. “We called 911. We called 211. We called everybody to get us out of there, and nobody came.”

    Maston said a nail fatally pierced her cousin as the roof continued to collapse. “She got trapped under. A nail pierced her main artery,” Maston said. “She just turned 40. Sept. 23, she just turned 40. She died nine days after her birthday.”

    Maston also shared fond memories of her cousin, saying that the deceased mother “loved everything.”

    “She loved life,” Maston added.

    Source: face2faceAfrica

  • Hurricane Ian: Man swims 45 minutes through floodwater to save his aged mother from drowning

    In the face of Hurricane Ian, a man swam half a mile through floodwater to save his mother from drowning after she refused to leave her house.

    Johnny Lauder’s mother Karen, 86, decided not to leave her house in Naples, Florida before Ian made landfall with 150mph winds on Wednesday.

    It had flooded around six inches (15cm) during Hurricane Irma in 2017 – so she assumed water levels would be similar to Ian.

    But when the storm hit this week, the water in the house was more than three feet (91cm) deep – eventually reaching up to her chest.

    “I could have gone to a shelter, but I didn’t think it’d be that bad,” Mrs Lauder told NBC News.

    It was then she sent a distress call.

    “She said the water was up to her wheelchair and hitting her belly button,” Mr Lauder said.

    At this point, he helped his three children crawl into his son’s attic with the three family pets and dove out of the window to rescue his mother.

    Pic: Johnny Lauder/AP
    Image:Karen Lauder on a makeshift bed. Pic: Johnny Lauder/AP

    45-minute swim through flooded streets

    It took him 45 minutes of swimming against the current through five feet of floodwater – with various vehicles floating by him – to reach Mrs Lauder’s house.

    “It was a very rough swim, if you can call it that, and I knew the water was coming up faster and faster,” he said.

    “I was aware of the dangers any type of current could take me, I could be hit by debris, but my mom was there and I knew she didn’t have much time.”

    But he added: “Who wouldn’t go for their mom?”

    Mr Lauder took pictures throughout the journey so he could send them back to his family as proof he was okay.

    When he got to the house, he could hear his mother’s screaming.

    “It was a sense of terror and relief at the same time,” he said.

    “The terror was that I didn’t know if something was falling on her or if she was trapped and hurt. But the relief was knowing that there’s still air in her lungs.”

    Pic: Johnny Lauder/AP
    Image:Eventually they wheeled her back through the streets. Pic: Johnny Lauder/AP

    Showing signs of hypothermia

    As a former rescuer diver and police officer, he could see she was showing signs of hypothermia and had sores on her body, so lifted her on top of a table and wrapped her in sheets while they waited for the water to subside.

    After three hours he was able to push her to safety in her wheelchair – with the help of his son.

    Mrs Lauder was taken to the hospital after contracting infections, but her son said: “They were treated and she’s warm. She’s in a soft, comfy bed. She’s good.”

    Pic: Johnny Lauder/AP
    Image:John and Karen Lauder. Pic: Johnny Lauder/AP

     

    Mr Lauder, his eldest son, and his mother have all had their homes destroyed.

    His sister-in-law in Miami set up a crowdfunding that has raised more than $17,000 (£15,050) after it emerged the family did not have rental insurance.

    “All that can be replaced, life can’t,” Mr Lauder said.

    “My mom has changed her tone: she will be evacuating next time. I hope people learn from other’s mistakes and not their own.”

    His mother added: “I’m just so glad I’m here today.”

     

  •  Hurricane Ian: Rivals Biden and DeSantis display unity

    In order to tour the hurricane Ian damage, US President Joe Biden and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis temporarily put their political differences aside.

    Mr. Biden shook hands with the emerging Republican star after viewing the storm’s devastation from a helicopter, and they exchanged compliments.

    At least 108 people were killed by Ian, a category four storm. Mr Biden said Florida’s recovery may take years.

    Officials are searching buildings for more victims as crews begin repairs.

    The president and the Florida governor have previously clashed over pandemic policies, climate change, abortion, and LGBT issues.

    Most recently Mr Biden slammed Mr DeSantis for flying undocumented migrants to the wealthy liberal enclave of Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts.

    But on Wednesday the two had only warm words for one another as they focused on hurricane relief during a joint press conference in the city of Fort Myers.

    Mr DeSantis, who is widely expected to run for president in 2024, and his wife met Mr Biden and First Lady Jill Biden on a wharf littered with storm debris.

    Flooded homes seen from the air
    IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES

    Mr DeSantis thanked the Bidens for coming to Florida and said he had been “very fortunate” to have good coordination with the federal government.

    Mr Biden told reporters that Mr DeSantis had done a “good job”, and that “we have very different political philosophies, but we’ve worked hand in glove”.

    “What the governor’s done is pretty remarkable,” Mr Biden said, adding that he had “recognised there’s a thing called global warming”.

    Mr DeSantis has backed funding to harden Florida’s defences against flooding, but has also argued in the past that global warming is being used as a pretext “to do a bunch of left-wing things”.

    Mr Biden said on Wednesday the debate over whether climate change is happening had finally ended.

    “More fires have burned in the west and the south-west, burned everything right to the ground, than in the entire state of New Jersey, as much room as that takes up,” the president said.

    “The reservoirs out west here are down to almost zero. We’re in a situation where the Colorado River looks more like a stream.”

    Meanwhile, Mr DeSantis received praise from another potential White House rival.

    At an event in Miami, former President Donald Trump lauded his response to the hurricane, saying: “God bless our governor.”

    Mr Trump and his former protege have been circling each other warily ahead of a widely anticipated duel for the 2024 Republican White House nomination.

    Over 278,000 homes and businesses in Florida did not have electricity on Wednesday a week after Hurricane Ian made landfall, according to website poweroutage.us.

    A temporary road to the hard-hit Pine Island – population 9,000 – opened ahead of schedule. But Sanibel Island is still cut off.

    Officials say the death toll from Hurricane Ian may rise as more victims are identified.

    The family of a mother of four from Ohio say she died after travelling to Fort Myers to celebrate her 40th birthday.

    Nishelle Harris-Miles became trapped in an Airbnb rental as floodwaters in the home pushed her towards the ceiling and a nail pierced her main artery, according to local media.

  • Hurricane Ian: Death toll up above 80, response criticised

    As certain government officials come under fire for their handling of the storm, the number of people killed as a result of Hurricane Ian in the Southeast United States has surpassed 80.

    Since Category 4 Hurricane Ian made landfall on Florida’s Gulf Coast on Wednesday with maximum sustained winds of 249 km per hour, at least 85 storm-related fatalities have been verified (155 miles per hour).

    Florida accounted for all but four of the fatalities.

    The sheriff’s office in coastal Lee County, which includes devastated Fort Myers, said it had counted 42 dead, with 39 deaths reported by officials in neighbouring counties.

    Officials in Lee County have faced questions over whether they mandated evacuations in time.

    Cecil Pendergrass, chairman of the county’s board of commissioners, said on Sunday that evacuation orders were given as soon as the hurricane’s direction became clear. Even then, some people chose to ride out the storm, Pendergrass said.

    “I respect their choices,” he said at a press conference. “But I’m sure a lot of them regret it now.”

    Deanne Criswell, the Federal Emergency Management Agency administrator, said the federal government planned to unleash a huge amount of aid, focusing its attention on Florida first. President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden are due to travel to the state on Wednesday.

    Criswell told Fox News Sunday that the federal government, including the Coast Guard and Department of Defense, had moved into position “the largest amount of search and rescue assets that I think we’ve ever put in place before”.

    Still, she warned that dangers remain.

    “We see so many more injuries and sometimes more fatalities after the storm,” Criswell said. “Standing water brings with it all kinds of hazards — it has debris, it could have power lines.”

    A car on a destroyed road surrounded by water and fallen trees after Hurricane Ian in Florida
    Ian made landfall on Florida’s Gulf Coast on Wednesday as a Category 4 hurricane, with maximum sustained winds of 249km/h (155mph) [Marco Bello/Reuters]

    Authorities in North Carolina said at least four people had been killed there. No deaths were immediately reported in South Carolina, where Ian made another US landfall on Friday.

    Chugging over land since then, Ian has diminished into an ever-weakening post-tropical cyclone, but water levels have continued to rise in some flooded areas, inundating homes and streets that were passable just a day or two earlier.

    The National Hurricane Center forecast more heavy rainfall was possible across parts of West Virginia and western Maryland into Sunday morning, and “major to record flooding” in central Florida.

    Washed away

    As the full scale of the devastation became clearer, officials said some of the heaviest damage was inflicted by wind-driven ocean surf that smashed into seaside communities and washed buildings away.

    Satellite images from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration showed beach cottages and a motel that lined the shores of Florida’s Sanibel Island had been destroyed in storm surges. Although most homes appeared to still be standing, roof damage to all was evident.

    Surveys from the ground showed that the barrier island, a popular tourist getaway that was home to some 6,000, was devastated.

    “It’s all just completely gone,” Sanibel’s city manager, Dana Souza, said. “Our electric system is pretty much destroyed, our sewer system has been damaged badly and our public water supply is under assessment.”

    The National Guard and the Coast Guard were flying in helicopters to the islands to rescue people after Sanibel’s only bridge to the mainland collapsed.

    More than 700,000 businesses and homes remained without power on Sunday afternoon in Florida alone, where more than 2 million customers lost electricity the first night of the storm.

  • As the death toll from Hurricane Ian exceeds 77, the storm is headed towards Washington and New York

    The American Red Cross has dispatched more than 1,000 emergency personnel to Florida in response to Ian, which they have called as one of the worst natural catastrophes to ever impact the state.

    After Hurricane Ian hit the US, at least 77 deaths have been verified, and rescuers are frantically looking for survivors among the wreckage of flooded homes.

    The remnants of one of the strongest and costliest hurricanes in American history is now headed north, with authorities in Florida and South Carolina left assessing the damage.

    Ian has been likened to an “A-bomb” and about 10,000 people remain unaccounted for, although the authorities believe many are likely to be in shelters or without power.

    It comes as President Joe Biden and the first lady confirmed their plans to travel to Florida and Puerto Rico next week to survey the damage and meet officials and residents after the hurricane-battered both regions.

    The Bidens will visit Puerto Rico on Monday and then Florida on Wednesday.

    HANDOUT - 30 September 2022, US, Naples: Destruction caused by Hurricane "Ian" on posh Gulf Shore Boulevard, a car fell into Moorings Bay. In Naples, "Ian" made landfall on Wednesday as a level four hurricane with speeds of around 240 kilometers per hour. (to dpa "After Hurricane "Ian": Chaos on Florida's West Coast") Photo by: Magdalena Tr'ndle/picture-alliance/dpa/AP Images

    According to the American Red Cross, more than 1,300 disaster workers are supporting relief efforts across five states.

    Of those killed, 73 were in Florida – mostly from drowning. But the storm has also had knock-on effects, and an elderly couple lost their lives after oxygen machines stopped working because of a power outage.

    A further four fatalities connected to the severe weather were reported in North Carolina – including two who died in a road crash during the storm.

    Hurricane Ian’s winds and coastal surges have terrorised millions of people for most of the week – and although it has now been slightly downgraded to a cyclone, officials have warned the storm is still dangerous.

    “Treacherous” conditions are still forecast throughout this weekend for large swathes of the east coast – including New York, New Jersey and Washington DC.

    An aerial view of damaged and inundated homes after Hurricane Ian tore through the area, in this still image taken from video in Lee County, Florida, U.S., September 29, 2022. WPLG TV via ABC via REUTERS. ATTENTION EDITORS - THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY MANDATORY CREDIT
    Image:Lee County, Florida

    Back in Florida, a massive clean-up effort is now underway, and the latest figures suggest that more than 1.1 million residents are still without power and WiFi.

    Governor Ron DeSantis said SpaceX chief executive Elon Musk had agreed to provide the company’s satellite internet service Starlink to all those without connectivity trying to get help or reunite with loved ones.

    Celebrities are also beginning to donate to a disaster relief fund.

    American football star Tom Brady, who now plays for the Florida-based Tampa Bay Buccaneers, tweeted that he would be contributing to the Florida Disaster Fund, and urged other NFL players to do the same.

    ‘I want to sit in a corner and cry’

    Anthony Rivera, 25, described climbing through the window of his ground-floor Fort Myers flat during the storm to carry his grandmother and girlfriend to the first floor.

    As they hurried to escape the rising water, the storm surge had washed a boat right up next to his apartment.

    “That’s the scariest thing in the world because I can’t stop no boat,” he said. “I’m not Superman.”

    Other distraught residents waded through knee-high water, salvaging what possessions they could from their flooded homes and loading them onto rafts and canoes.

    “I want to sit in the corner and cry. I don’t know what else to do,” Stevie Scuderi said after shuffling through her mostly destroyed Fort Myers home.

  • Hurricane Ian: At least 30 killed as survivors liken impact of deadly US storm to an ‘A-bomb’

        Damage of tens of billions of pounds has been done, and around 1.7 million homes and businesses are without power. Rescuers are still searching the rubble, so it’s possible that the death toll may grow.

    At least 30 people have been killed after one of the most powerful storms ever to strike the US mainland wrought widespread destruction, with the number of dead expected to rise.

    Hurricane Ian has caused tens of billions of pounds in damage and left around 1.7 million homes and businesses without power, leaving residents to liken the impact to “an A-bomb”.

    In Florida, where the storm made landfall after battering western Cuba, coastal towns were turned into disaster areas and around 10,000 people remain unaccounted for although the authorities believe many are likely to be in shelters or without power.

    A general view shows a flooded neighbourhood after Hurricane Ian hits North Port, in Florida
    Image:Whole neighbourhoods remain flooded in Florida

    Rescuers are continuing to search for survivors among the ruins of flooded homes.

    Ian went on to hammer North and South Carolina with winds of 85mph, destroying piers and leading roads to be blocked by flooding and fallen trees.

    Although now a post-tropical cyclone and weakening, it was still expected to bring treacherous conditions to parts of the Carolinas, Virginia and West Virginia on Saturday.

    The National Hurricane Center said: “The dangerous storm surge, flash flooding, and high wind threat continues.”

    While the number of casualties and repair costs remain unclear, the scale of the damage was becoming apparent in Florida.

    State governor Ron DeSantis said: “Those older homes that just aren’t as strong built, they got washed into the sea.

    “If you are hunkering down in that, that is something that I think would be very difficult to be survivable.”

    Meanwhile, insurers are braced for a hit of up to $47bn (£42bn), in what could be the costliest Florida storm since Hurricane Andrew in 1992, according to US property data and analytics company CoreLogic.

    US President Joe Biden has approved a disaster declaration, making federal resources available to areas impacted by the storm.

    “We’re just beginning to see the scale of that destruction.

    “It’s likely to rank among the worst… in the nation’s history,” he said.

    Mr Biden also declared an emergency in North Carolina on Saturday.

    The confirmed dead include 27 victims in Florida, mostly from drowning but also as a result of the storm’s aftermath.

    An elderly couple died after their oxygen machines shut off when they lost power, authorities said.

    Other victims included a 68-year-old woman swept into the ocean by a wave and a 67-year-old man who fell into rising water inside his home while awaiting rescue.

    A 71-year-old man suffered a fatal fall from a rooftop while putting up rain shutters.

    Image: Protests have been held in Havana over continuing power cuts following the storm

    The authorities have warned the number of dead is likely to rise much higher once more extensive searches were carried out.

    Meanwhile, Cubans have staged protests in neighborhoods of Havana still without electricity, days after Hurricane Ian knocked out power to the island, as well as flattening homes and ravaging agricultural fields.

  • Cubans take to the streets over power outages

    It’s not just the US that has been thrown into disarray by Hurricane Ian.

    Last night, Cubans took to the streets to bang pots and protest across several neighbourhoods in the capital Havana as the country entered its third day of blackouts following the seismic storm.

    The massive storm caused Cuba’s grid to collapse earlier this week, knocking out power to the entire island of 11 million people, flattening homes and obliterating fields.

    For some Cubans – already reeling from shortages of food, fuel and medicine – the prolonged blackout was the last straw.

    Jorge Luis Cruz, of Havana’s El Cerro neighborhood, stood in his doorway on Thursday evening banging a metal pot and shouting in anger.

    Dozens of others on side streets around his home could be heard banging pots from terraces and rooftops in the dark. “This isn’t working, enough of this,” Cruz told Reuters. “All my food is rotten. Why? Because we don’t have electricity.”

    Cruz said his family did not want him to take to the street out of fear he would be hauled off to jail. “Let them take me,” he said.

    Source: BBC

  • Hurricane Ian heads to South Carolina

    Hurricane Ian is projected to reach the coast of South Carolina later on Friday, move over the east of the state and then travel up to North Carolina.

    According to the National Hurricane Center’s latest advisory, Ian is currently about 105 miles southeast of Charleston, the largest city in South Carolina with some 800,000 people.

    Ian’s maximum sustained winds have remained around 85 mph (140kmph) and NHC forecasts say winds of tropical storm intensity are ongoing across much of the coast of the Carolinas.

    Life-threatening storm surge and hurricane conditions are expected in the region by afternoon.

    Ian is however expected to rapidly weaken after it makes landfall, become a so-called extratropical low – a cyclone with a low pressure centre – by the time it moves over North Carolina and dissipate by Saturday night.

    These satellite images show Hurricane Ian’s progression as it first barrelled across Cuba in the Caribbean on Tuesday before heading to Florida.

    Ian was downgraded to a tropical storm after making landfall in Florida on Wednesday and Thursday.

    But as it moved into the Atlantic Ocean it regained its hurricane strength and is now heading for South Carolina and Georgia.

    Satellite images showing Ian's progress from Cuba across Florida

    South Carolina braces for life-threatening storm surges

    As Hurricane Ian heads towards the coast of South Carolina, meterorologists are warning of life-threatening storm surges and winds of 140km per hour (87mph).

    Tens of thousands of residents have moved away from low-lying land.

    In Florida, the focus has now turned to a massive search and rescue operation after Ian caused widespread damage across the state on Wednesday and Thursday.

    Map showing predicted path of Hurricane Ian

    Nearly two million still without power in Florida

    Just under two million homes and businesses in Florida are still without power after the state was battered by Hurricane Ian.

    That’s down from more than 3.3 million power customers who have been affected by the storm since it hit Florida’s Gulf Coast on Wednesday.

    Emergency workers have been trying to reach stranded Florida residents as Ian heads on towards North and South Carolina, leaving behind deadly floodwaters, downed power lines and widespread damage.

    Duke Energy Corp said it was readying crews to respond to potential power outages across the Carolinas, according to Reuters.

    Source: BBC

  • Hurricane Ian’s route through Florida from Cuba

    On Tuesday, Hurricane Ian first tore across Cuba in the Caribbean before making its way to Florida, as shown in these satellite photographs.

    Following its Wednesday and Thursday landfall in Florida, Ian was downgraded to a tropical storm.

    But as it moved into the Atlantic Ocean it regained its hurricane strength and is now heading for South Carolina and Georgia.

    Satellite images showing Ian's progress from Cuba across Florida
  • Cubans protest power cuts in the streets

    The aftermath of Hurricane Ian has affected countries other than the United States.

    As the nation entered its third day of darkness following the seismic storm, Cubans rushed to the streets last night to beat pots and protest in various Havana neighbourhoods.

    The massive storm caused Cuba’s grid to collapse earlier this week, knocking out power to the entire island of 11 million people, flattening homes, and obliterating fields.

    For some Cubans – already reeling from shortages of food, fuel, and medicine – the prolonged blackout was the last straw.

    Jorge Luis Cruz, of Havana’s El Cerro neighborhood, stood in his doorway on Thursday evening banging a metal pot and shouting in anger.

    Dozens of others on side streets around his home could be heard banging pots from terraces and rooftops in the dark. “This isn’t working, enough of this,” Cruz told Reuters. “All my food is rotten. Why? Because we don’t have electricity.”

    Cruz said his family did not want him to take to the street out of fear he would be hauled off to jail. “Let them take me,” he said.

  • Fort Myers: Eventhough no deaths were recorded, the devastation is too clear

    The town’s fire chief says no deaths have been officially reported in the devastated Florida city of Fort Myers.

    Speaking to local NPR affiliate 91.3 WLRN early on Friday morning, Chief Tracy McMillion said that while authorities are still working on a detailed damage assessment of the “catastrophic devastation”, it is increasingly clear that Hurricane Ian “totally changed the face of our charming city”.

    “Concrete blocks flew more than half a mile,” he said. “Boats are on roads in areas that they shouldn’t even have gotten to.”

    McMillion added that coastal parts of the city, as well as the city’s downtown area, have “taken a beating”.

    “These are the things that made our city really charming,” he added.

    Many local residents remain without power in the town. McMillion said that authorities are currently focused on making sure residents have all the supplies they need and on repairing critical infrastructure.

    We’re on our way to Ft Myers now and will be able to bring you some updates from the town shortly.

  • Hurricane Ian: Death toll rises as storm strengthens

    A huge search and rescue effort is continuing in Florida in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian, which cut a swathe of destruction across the US state.

    At least 10 people have died in the state but officials fear the confirmed toll could rise considerably.

    Joe Biden has warned the category one storm could be the deadliest hurricane in Florida’s history, with a “substantial loss of life”.

    Ian is now moving inland and heading towards North and South Carolina.

    A blackout is still affecting some 2.2 million Florida homes and businesses.

    The flood waters have been so severe they have trapped some people in their homes, officials said, with the National Guard going door to door in the city of Orlando to rescue those stranded.

    The 10 deaths that have have been confirmed were all in the south-west Charlotte County, which saw intense winds.

    Joseph Tiseo, a local commissioner, told the BBC the area had a “tremendous wind event that lasted for 12 hours straight… it was brutal”.

    He said said it was not yet clear how many of the deaths were a direct result of the hurricane.

    A little further south, Lee County took the brunt of the storm surge.

    The state’s Governor Ron DeSantis told a news conference on Thursday evening that the damage in Fort Myers, a harbourside city there, was “almost indescribable”.

    “To see a house just sitting in the middle of Estero Bay, literally must have gotten picked up, flown because of the massive wind speed and the storm surge and deposited in a body of water,” he said.

    “I would say the most significant damage that I saw was on Ford Myers Beach, some of the homes were wiped out, some of its was just concrete slabs”

    One woman who lost her home said the experience is “numbing” and has her feeling “overwhelmed”.

    “It’s not my first hurricane but it’s my first total loss,” Karen, who lives on San Carlos Island in Fort Myers told Reuters.

    Some residents had to swim out of their homes.

    “You have to either swim or drown,” an Orlando woman told CBS News, the BBC’s partner in the US.

    A woman in Fort Myers, who swam to safety when her ground floor apartment began to flood, said when she returned home she “had to wait about five minutes for all the floodwaters to come out”.

    And at the Sun Seekers mobile home park in North Fort Myers, residents recounted their terror as they tried to protect themselves with blankets.

    “It was terrifying, because you’re helpless”, one of the residents, Kim said. “We had no [phone] service to call anyone, but no one would have come anyway.”

    Fort Myers Beach after Hurricane Ian. 29 September 2022.IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
    Image caption, Hurricane Ian shattered Lee County in Florida, with homes on Fort Myers Beach left wrecked after the storm passed

    At the governor’s briefing, Kevin Guthrie, director at the Florida Division of Emergency Management warned about “indirect deaths” – the fatalities that can happen after a storm system has passed.

    He warned homeowners to watch out for power lines mixed in trees and said no one should be tinkering with generators and chainsaws, or climbing ladders without proper training.

    “People need to be extremely careful,” Mr Guthrie said.

    “If you do not know how to use a chainsaw. If you do not know how to climb a ladder. If you do not know the difference between a cable line and a power line, you should not be doing that.”

    Some parts of Naples, a seaside city south of Fort Myers, have been rendered a dark and deserted ghost town, and the city’s iconic pier has been smashed in half.

    The BBC’s Bernd Debusmann, who is reporting from Naples, says a concession stand – which just days ago marked the halfway point on the pier – now stands precariously over the water, with splintered pieces of wood hanging off.

    About a block from the beachfront, some roads remain impassable and underwater, while others have been left covered in mud as the water slowly recedes.

    Hurricane Ian trajectory
    Short presentational transparent line

    Hurricane Ian hit Cuba first, causing a total blackout in the country on Tuesday.

    Meanwhile in Puerto Rico, the massive clean-up effort continues, after the hurricane hit the Caribbean island last week.

    There was also a power blackout there, and ten days on, more than 269,000 households are still without electricity, according to poweroutage.us.

    Puerto Rico was already reeling from Hurricane Fiona, a category one storm that hit just days earlier, on September 18.

    As Hurricane Ian rolls on and attention moves to Florida, many on the island are worried about being forgotten.

    “To the people of Puerto Rico, we have not gone away,” President Biden said on Thursday, speaking at the headquarters of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema) in Washington DC.

    “I am committed to you and the recovery of the island, we will stand by you no matter how long it takes to get it done.”

    Source: BBC

     

  • After Hurricane Ian: Joe Biden to visit Florida

    Following one of the “deadliest” hurricanes to ever hit Florida, the US president has plans to travel there. As the storm travels north, further warnings have been issued.

    In the wake of Hurricane Ian, US President Joe Biden announced on Thursday that he is arranging a trip to Florida.

    “When the conditions allow it, I’m going to be going to Florida,” the president said.

    Biden was speaking at FEMA emergency management headquarters in Washington, which has been organizing the federal response to the disaster that has laid waste to swathes of the southern peninsula state.

    “This could be the deadliest hurricane in Florida history,” he said, adding that “The numbers… are still unclear, but we’re hearing reports of what may be a substantial loss of life.”

    At least six deaths have been reported, but this number is expected to climb as rescue workers spread across the affected areas.

    More than 2.5 million homes and businesses had been left without power by Thursday.

    The National Hurricane Centre (NHC) issued a hurricane warning for the coastline of South Carolina, as Ian headed further north with maximum sustained winds of 70 mph (110 km/h).

    Damaged homes and debris are shown in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian

    Hurricane Ian has left vast amounts of damage and destruction in its wake

  • ‘The worst storm surge I’ve ever seen’ – Hurricane Ian devastates Fort Myers

    Less than 24 hours after the hurricane made landfall, I’m standing with Pastor James Macon from the city’s River Church, assessing the devastation. Fort Myers was directly in the line of the hurricane.

    Boats are piled on top of one another at the marina, pieces of the floating harbour have been forced inland, and the area is covered with muck and trash.

    “I’ve never seen anything like this in all my years in Florida. I’ve been here since 1982 and I’m lost for word right now,” he tells me.

    “This is, wow.”

    Pastor James says he’s been driving around looking for people in need of help and he’s particularly worried about homeless people who might have been out last night.

    But while he’s aware that much of the damage here in the marina is likely to impact a different end of society, he says everyone needs help.

    “This neighbourhood, of course, they’re pretty well off, but we’re here to help them out.”

    Lee county, the area that surrounds Fort Myers took the brunt of the storm surge.

    There’s been suggestions from the local sheriff, Carmine Marceno, that – in outlying island communities – particularly where they’re hard to access as a result of at least one destroyed bridge and a damaged causeway – the authorities fear they could yet find a significant loss of life.

    But so far, there’s been no official confirmation of that claim and, in a later interview, Mr Marceno was more cautious.

    “I don’t know the exact numbers, it’s very preliminary,” he told CNN.

    The hurricane quickly lost power as it barrelled into the gulf side of the Florida peninsular and though heavy rain continued to pose a risk of flooding, the wind speed quickly dropped.

    Fort Myers in particular though will be counting the cost for some time.

    Patrick Hallquist was at home when the hurricane struck and says he’s never seen anything this bad.

    Patrick Hallquist in St Myers, Florida

    “I’ve been in quite a few hurricanes and this is the worst storm surge I’ve ever seen”, he tells me.

    “It was a little bit anxiety-ridden,” he adds.

    Despite the devastation, many here feel they’ve had a lucky escape from a hurricane that fits a pattern of increasingly powerful storms, thought to be fuelled in part by man-made global warming.

    Pastor James says he’s so far seen no evidence of a large number of casualties.

    “I have a lot of friends around here, I’ve visited their houses and so far, so good,” he tells me.

    “By the grace of God, we did endure this thing.”

  • Hurricane Ian: Cities flooded and power cut as storm crosses Florida

    One of the most dangerous storms to hit the US in years has left 2.4 million homes and businesses in Florida without power and floodwaters surging inland.

    Hurricane Ian made landfall at around 15:10 local time (19:10 GMT) on Wednesday, smashing into the coast with wind speeds of up to 241km/h (150mph).

    Dramatic scenes saw a hospital roof blown off, cars submerged and trees ripped out of the ground.

    The category four hurricane was later downgraded to a tropical storm.

    However, Floridians were warned that the most dangerous 24 hours lay ahead and the mayor of Tampa urged people to shelter in place through the night into Thursday morning.

    “We are going to get the majority of the rain and the higher winds starting about 20:00, and they are going to last throughout the night,” Jane Castor said during a Wednesday evening briefing.

    In Lee County – the south-west region where Ian made landfall – police were prevented from responding to reports of looting at a petrol station because of the storm damage.

    As a result, a curfew has been declared “until further notice”.

    Lee County Manager Roger Desjarlais said that the Fort Myers community had “been – to some extent – decimated”. According to news agency AFP, some neighbourhoods in the city of 80,000 had been left resembling lakes.

    State Governor Ron DeSantis described Ian as the “biggest flood event” south-west Florida had ever seen, and announced that 7,000 National Guard troops are ready to lead rescue operations in flood zones.

    President Joe Biden will receive a briefing on Thursday from the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

    Ian is now continuing to move north through Florida. Jacksonville International Airport, based in north-east Florida, cancelled all flights scheduled for Thursday.

    The storm is forecast to emerge into the Atlantic by Thursday morning.

    It is expected to reach Georgia and South Carolina on Friday. Virginia has also joined Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Florida by declaring a state of emergency.

    Cuba’s western coast was hit by Hurricane Ian on Tuesday. Power has now been restored in some areas after the island was plunged into a total blackout. Two people are understood to have been killed in Cuba and more than 20 Cuban migrants are believed to be missing at sea.

     

    Source: BBC

  • What is a storm surge?

    We’ve been talking lots about storm surges today, but not everyone will be familiar with the term.

    As a hurricane approaches a coast, the swirling winds force ocean water up onto the land. Atmospheric pressure from the storm will also help squeeze the water ashore.

    The National Hurricane Center has said these surges are “often the greatest threat to life and property from a hurricane.”

    Water is able to move fast in a surge, sweeping people away, throwing about boats and vehicles, and destroying structures.

    It takes six inches of fast-moving water to knock over an adult.

    Storm surges can become even more dangerous if they coincide with high tide, and a powerful storm surge can sweep away roads, erode beaches and contaminate land with salt water.

    The waters may take a couple of days to fully subside.

    Many of the 1,500 people killed during Hurricane Katrina in 2005 lost their lives directly or indirectly due to storm surges.

    The terrifying footage below shows the storm surge caused by Hurricane Ian…

    DISCLAIMER: Independentghana.com will not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article. The views expressed in the article are solely those of the author’s, and do not reflect those of The Independent Ghana

    Source: Skynews

  • Ian approaches Cat 5 Strength as Floridians Run Away from “Catastrophic Flooding, Life-Threatening Storm Surge”

    With maximum winds of 155 mph and as it approaches Florida’s west coast, Hurricane Ian is a devastating Category 4 storm, just shy of the most deadly Category 5 status. Early on Wednesday, the state already began to experience high winds and rain.

    Residents made last-minute preparations to board up their homes and businesses.  And miles of cars packed the roads as residents sought to escape ahead of the monster storm.

    “We have about 2.5 million Floridians that are currently under some type of an evacuation order,” said Gov. Ron DeSantis.

    Saint Petersburg’s mayor issued a warning for those staying behind. “After a certain time when tropical force winds are here, we will not be sending out first responders,” said Mayor Ken Welch.

     

    The storm is forecast to make landfall Wednesday afternoon in the Fort Myers area. Life-threatening conditions are expected, including several feet of storm surge and more than 20 inches of rain in some areas.

    “In some areas, there will be catastrophic flooding and life-threatening storm surge,” said DeSantis.

    The state is bracing for millions of power outages. Thirty thousand workers are on standby to restore electricity after the storm passes.

     

    Seven thousand National Guard members have been activated under the state of emergency.

    “We could be everything from security, to transportation,” said Major General Eifert, head of Florida’s National Guard. “Aviation is a big part if we end up in search and rescue scenarios. So, we’re kind of the Swiss army knife of operations. We can be used for whatever the Dept. of Emergency Management needs us to do.”

    CBN’s Operation Blessing team has been pre-staging disaster relief supplies in Ocala, Florida so they can jump into action with aid once the storm passes.

    “This is going to be a nasty nasty day, two days,” Gov. DeSantis said early Wednesday. “Do what you need to do to stay safe. If you are where that storm is approaching, you’re already in hazardous conditions. It’s going to get a lot worse very quickly. So please hunker down.”

    An odd precursor to Ian’s landfall is signaling just how powerful the storm is – strong enough to suck the water out of Tampa Bay. Meteorologist Greg Dee with WTFS-TV in Tampa shared a video of the phenomenon on Facebook.

    Meanwhile, parts of Georgia and South Carolina are preparing for the storm too. Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp has declared a state of emergency, with 500 National Guard troops on standby if needed.

     

     

  • The recent footage from the ground

    With just over an hour until Hurricane Ian is set to make landfall, terrifying footage is emerging from across Florida. 

    In Fort Meyers, news footage captured a dangerous storm surge rushing past.

    Similar scenes were caught on camera at Sanibel Island.

    And in Punta Gorda, trees struggle as the wind howls.

     

     

  • Marco Rubio’: This storm is bigger than the state of Florida’

    Asked what he was most worried about in an interview with Fox News, he replied: “The water. The flooding.” We talk about storm surges. We talk about flooding,” he said.

    “We’re talking about people drowning to death, dying because of water is way too high…”I worry and now we pray for people who didn’t heed the evacuation warnings,” Rubio said.

    “This is a massive storm. This storm is bigger than the state of Florida. It’s wider than the peninsula.”

    Source: Skynews
  • Ukrainians told to be ready to fight for Russia

    Ukraine’s progress in the southern regions of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia has been far more limited than its successes in the north-east.

    Front line positions come under regular fire as both Russia and Ukraine attempt to push forward. The BBC’s Abdujalil Abdurasulov gained rare access to the Ukrainian front line in Kherson region.

    An old Soviet self-propelled howitzer called Gvozdika or “Carnation” is rolled out in an open field and put into position. Its barrel tilts up. “Fire!” comes the command.

    The gunners hastily move away after the last shot, acting quickly.

    Although the advancement of Ukrainian forces in the south is very slow, their artillery units remain busy.

    Stus, commander of the gunners, explains that the Russians target his infantry and they respond in order to silence them.

    Their job is very much felt at the front line. Soldiers walk across the vast field under the cover of a line of trees. They pay no attention to the sound of missiles flying above their head nor the thud of explosions. The fighters say a Russian observation post is 500m away and they might be within the range of small arms.

    The Ukrainians move quickly to reach a destroyed farm building that they took back just a week ago. Now, they are digging trenches and carrying sandbags in order to fortify their new position.

    Stus, commander of the gunners standing next to the “Gvozdika” howitzer
    Image caption, Stus, commander of the gunners, says troops “shouldn’t underestimate our enemy”

    But Ukraine’s advancement in the south is moving slowly.

    All talk about counter-offensive here helps to deceive Russians and achieve gains in the East, laughs Vasyl, a deputy commander of the regiment.

    “But we have some success here as well. We continue liberating villages with small steps but it’s very difficult – every victory we have is covered with blood,” he adds.

    Many Ukrainians who remain behind the Russian front line, in the occupied territories, are anxiously waiting for this counter-offensive.

    “We’re euphoric when Ukraine hits the occupied territories,” says Iryna, a resident of Melitopol in the south. “It means that Ukraine has not forgotten us. We all know that living near military infrastructure and buildings is not safe, so most civilians have moved out from those locations.”

    But for people in the occupied territories, the longer they wait, the harder it is to survive. Many believed that the counter-offensive would happen in August. But when that didn’t happen, people started to flee towards Ukrainian controlled territories and areas further to the West.

    Among them was Tatyana Kumok from Melitopol. The Israeli citizen was visiting her hometown when the Russian invasion started in February. She stayed in the city and distributed aid to residents but in September, she and her family decided to leave. One of the main reasons for leaving was Russia’s promise to hold a so-called referendum.

    “As soon as it’s done, the Russians will introduce new bans according to their laws and try to legitimise the occupation,” she says.

    With the city turned into a giant military base, she says it is clear that Russian troops won’t abandon the city easily.

    “It was obvious the city won’t be liberated this fall,” she adds.

    Tatyana Kumok helping distribute aidIMAGE SOURCE,TATYANA KUMOK
    Image caption, Tatyana Kumok and her family fled Melitopol just before Russia decided to hold a so-called referendum

    Even a silent resistance to Russian occupation is getting dangerous now.

    In September many families were forced to send their children to Russian-administered schools even though their children would be exposed to the Kremlin’s propaganda.

    “If you don’t send your child to school, it’s a litmus test for you – it means you have pro-Ukrainian views,” explains Ms Kumok. “I know parents who had to tell their seven-year-old child not to talk about things discussed at home with anyone at school. Otherwise the child could be taken away. That was really awful.”

    A picture taken during a visit to Berdyansk organized by the Russian military shows children at a newly opened kindergarten in Berdyansk, Zaporizhia regionIMAGE SOURCE,EPA
    Image caption, Children at a newly opened nursery in Russian occupied Berdyansk of Zaporizhia region

    The crackdown on people who do not support Russian rule is rising.

    “There is a sharp increase of arrests since August following the successful Ukrainian air strikes,” says Bohdan who is still living in Kherson. He spoke with the BBC via a messenger app and his real name is not being revealed for his safety.

    Bohdan says that earlier detentions were based on a list of names that the Russian military had. But now anyone can be arrested and thrown into a basement for interrogation.

    Russian soldiers recently came to the house of Hanna (not her real name) in Nova-Kakhovka, a city in Kherson region, to check who was living there.

    “They didn’t go inside the house but it was still scary. I don’t even walk with my phone now,” she said via a messenger app.

    A woman casts her ballot during voting in a so-called referendum on the joining of Russian-controlled regions of Ukraine to Russia, in a hospital in Berdyansk, Zaporizhzhia regionIMAGE SOURCE,EPA
    Image caption, A woman in Russian occupied Zaporizhzhia casts her ballot during voting in a so-called referendum

    The self-styled referendum is bringing a new threat to the local population – mobilisation. Many men could be drafted to fight for the Russian army.

    Russian soldiers are already going house to house in some villages and writing down the names of male residents, local residents say. They claim soldiers have told them to be ready for a call-up after the referendum.

    Men aged 18-35 are reportedly not allowed to leave the occupied territories any more.

    Iryna left on 23 September, the first day of the so-called referendum, with her husband and two children. They wanted to stay in order to look after her paralysed 92-year-old grandmother.

    “But when Putin announced the call-up, and we already knew about the referendum, it was clear there would be a mass mobilization and men would be detained right on the street irrespective of their age,” she says.

    “We could survive without gas and electricity, we could find solutions for that. But not for this. That was our red line,” says Iryna.

    Vasyl, a deputy commander of the regiment in uniform smiling at the camera
    Image caption, Vasyl, a deputy commander in the Ukrainian army says “every victory we have is covered with blood”

    The Russian call-up will pose more challenges for the Ukrainian counter-offensive.

    It will certainly escalate the war and more people will die, Ukrainian soldiers say.

    “We shouldn’t underestimate our enemy,” says Stus, commander of the gunners. “Those new recruited Russian soldiers will have guns and grenades, so they will pose a threat, which we will have to eliminate”.

    As the gunners wait for new tasks with their howitzer hidden in the bushes, Russian troops hit a nearby Ukrainian village with Grad missiles. The gunners are silent as they listen to the series of explosions.

    That terrifying sound was just another reminder that the success of the Ukrainian troops will depend on how quickly they can make Russian artillery and rocket launchers go silent.

    Source: BBC

     

  • Hurricane Ian: Cuba suffers complete blackout after storm

    Cuba is completely without power after Hurricane Ian pummelled the western end of the island, its government has announced.

    The electrical system is experiencing total collapse, officials said, after one of the main power plants could not be brought back online.

    Two people were reported dead and buildings were damaged nationwide.

    The category three hurricane, packing wind speeds of up to 195km/h (120mph), is now bearing down on Florida.

    On Cuban state television on Tuesday, the head of the electrical energy authority announced that an island-wide blackout had occurred as a result of the national electrical system’s breakdown, leaving 11 million people in the dark.

    A journalist with a state-run news agency reported that 100% of the electrical circuits in the country were out of service and that “the Antonio Guiteras thermo-electric power plant… could not be synchronised”.

    Based in Matanzas, 100km east of the capital Havana, Antonio Guiteras is the most important energy plant in Cuba. Its shutdown means there is currently no electricity generation anywhere on the island.

    The owner of the famous Finca Robaina cigar producer posted photos on social media of the havoc wreaked by the hurricane in the tobacco farms.

    “It was apocalyptic, a real disaster,” wrote Hirochi Robaina.

    Forecasters had warned that some regions of Cuba could see up to 30cm (12in) of rain under Hurricane Ian.

    Mayelin Suarez, a resident of Pinar del Rio, said Monday night, when the storm hit, was “the darkest of her life”.

    “We almost lost the roof off our house,” she told Reuters. “My daughter, my husband and I tied it down with a rope to keep it from flying away.”

    Cuban President Miguel Diaz Canel visited the province and vowed that it would rise “above adversity”, the Cuban presidency tweeted.

    Predicted path of Hurricane Ian. Updated 27 September
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    A 43-year-old woman in the province was killed after the walls of her home collapsed. A farmer in the town of San Juan y Martínez was electrocuted while trying to shut off a wind turbine used for irrigation, the New York Times reported.

    The hurricane has been gathering force in the south-eastern Gulf of Mexico after leaving Cuba, says the US National Hurricane Center (NHC).

    On Tuesday night the storm was passing over the Florida Keys, a string of islands off the southern tip of the state.

    It is projected to make landfall on Florida’s west coast late on Wednesday.

    The NHC says that Ian could be a category four hurricane by the time it strikes Florida’s western coast, with wind speeds topping 130mph. Some 2.5 million people in Florida are under evacuation orders.

    A satellite image of the storm
    A satellite image of the storm

    Florida Governor Ron DeSantis warned in a news conference on Tuesday that the storm is “the real deal”.

    He declared a state of emergency for all of Florida over the weekend and has activated 5,000 National Guard troops.

    The Tampa area could receive its first direct hit from a hurricane since 1921, officials say, and might see 3m (10ft) of storm surge along the coast.

    Meteorologists have said flash flooding is possible in the Florida peninsula and Florida Keys as the hurricane approaches.

    The neighbouring state of Georgia has also declared a state of emergency and placed 500 National Guard troops on standby.

    The White House has made its own emergency declaration, which will help federal and state officials co-ordinate disaster relief and assistance.

    President Joe Biden, a Democrat, spoke with Gov DeSantis, a Republican, on Tuesday evening, and the two committed to “continued close co-ordination”, the White House said.

    The Caribbean is still reeling from the effects of Hurricane Fiona, which tore through the region last week.

    Moving northward to parts of the Atlantic Canada coastline and eastern Quebec, Fiona claimed two lives, washed homes into the sea and downed power lines over the weekend.

    Source: BBC

  • Hurricane Ian forces Nasa to shelter Artemis Moon rocket

    The American space agency is to pull its Artemis-I Moon rocket off the launch pad in Florida because of an approaching hurricane.

    Nasa says the Space Launch System (SLS) vehicle will be rolled back into its engineering workshop to protect it.

    Hurricane Ian is moving through the Gulf of Mexico and is expected to make landfall in Florida on Thursday.

    High winds and heavy rain are forecast for the Kennedy Space Center.

    Although the spaceport will probably escape the worst of the storm’s impacts, Nasa can’t risk its multi-billion-dollar rocket being damaged.

    The return to Kennedy’s famous Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) likely now moves the maiden flight of the SLS to November.

    Nasa had hoped the storm’s track through the Gulf would take it sufficiently westwards so that the rocket could stay out on the pad, enabling a lift-off to take place sooner.

    But the medium-range forecast models have, in recent hours, seen the expected track shift eastwards, putting the west coast of Florida, or its panhandle, directly in the firing line.

    Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has already declared a “state of emergency”.

    Nasa has one of its giant tractors on standby at the pad, ready to initiate the roll-back.

    The slow speed at which this Crawler Transporter moves means the 6.7km (4.2 miles) journey to the VAB takes the best part of half a day. Engineers will therefore want to get it under way as soon as possible.

    The retreat is expected to begin at 0400BST (2300EDT).

    Artemis-I is the first in a series of missions that will eventually see humans return to the lunar surface after an absence of 50 years.

    The initial flight of the SLS is uncrewed: it’s billed as a safety demonstration of the hardware and will send a capsule called Orion out to and beyond the Moon before coming home to a splashdown in the Pacific Ocean.

    Assuming everything works as it should, astronauts will then climb aboard the next scheduled SLS-Orion outing in 2024. This again will do a simple loop around the Moon.

    It’s on Artemis-III, possibly in late 2025, that astronauts will make the trip down to the lunar surface.

    Source: BBC