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Hurricane Melissa strengthens to category 5 as communities in Jamaica warned of ‘potentially unimaginable impact’ – live | Hurricanes

Summary of the day so far

It’s almost 1.30pm Monday in Kingston, Jamaica, where islanders are nervously awaiting landfall of category 5 Hurricane Melissa early on Tuesday, even though strong winds and heavy rains are already buffeting the south coast and inland areas.

Here’s what we’ve been following so far:

  • Officials say the hurricane, one of the strongest ever recorded in the Caribbean, has “the ingredients to be a catastrophic storm”. Liz Stephens, professor in climate risks and resilience at University of Reading, said: “Communities in Jamaica will need to prepare for potentially unimaginable impacts, and with climate change fuelling stronger storms with higher rainfall totals, this is a stark example for other countries as to what may be in store for them.”

  • At least six deaths have already been attributed to the storm. Three people were killed in Haiti and another in the Dominican Republic, where another person remains missing, according to the Associated Press. Two people died in Jamaica over the weekend as they cut trees ahead of the storm.

  • Emergency evacuations have been under way in vulnerable areas of Jamaica for many hours, even though officials warn no area of the island will be immune to Melissa’s 157mph+ winds, combined with its potentially deadly storm surge.

  • Andrew Holness, the prime minster of Jamaica, told an emergency briefing in Kingston on Monday, that residents were turning up at some of his country’s 881 hurricane shelters only to find them locked. “We have to strengthen this part of our preparedness, of getting the shelter managers to not wait until someone is coming. Once we activate the shelter, it should be open and ready for persons to come in, even if no one comes,” he said.

  • Jamaica’s two international airports have been closed since Sunday. Desmond McKenzie, the minister of local government, warned: “Many communities will not survive the flooding. Kingston is extremely low. No community in Kingston is immune.”

  • After moving north through Jamaica on Tuesday, Melissa will set its sights on Cuba on Tuesday night, and then the south-eastern Bahamas on Wednesday. The National Hurricane Center in Miami on Monday issued a hurricane warning for most of eastern Cuba, including the provinces of Granma, Santiago de Cuba, Guantánamo and Holguin; and a hurricane watch is in place for the Turks and Caicos islands and south-eastern Bahamas.

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Key events

AccuWeather: Hurricane Melissa a ‘dire situation unfolding in slow motion’

Hurricane experts say Melissa’s slow meander through the Caribbean will cause considerably more damage, and have farther reaching effects than faster-paced storms.

As of Monday lunchtime, the National Hurricane Center in Miami reported, Melissa was on a west-northwesterly track at only 3mph. It will eventually speed up as it turn north, then northeast, but the storm – currently with maximum sustained winds of 175mph – is not forecast to emerge from the south-eastern Bahamas and into the open Atlantic until Wednesday night.

“This is a dire situation unfolding in slow motion. A major hurricane slowly crawling toward an island with powerful winds, extreme rainfall, and damaging storm surge is a perilous situation for a place like Jamaica,” AccuWeather’s chief meteorologist Jonathan Porter said in a statement.

“Slow-moving major hurricanes often go down in history as some of the deadliest and most destructive storms on record. Tens of thousands of families are facing hours of extreme wind gusts above 100mph and days of relentless, torrential rainfall.

“A storm surge of 10 to 15ft in the hardest hit areas along the southern coast of Jamaica will risk lives and result in property destruction. Additionally, a storm surge of 6 to 10ft could damage or destroy critical infrastructure along the bays and shorelines near Kingston.”

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