Hurricane
Matthew, the most powerful Atlantic tropical storm since 2007, veered north
late Sunday and was on a path to land a heavy punch on Jamaica, Cuba and Haiti,
forecasters said.
"This is shaping up to be a
devastating blow, especially to places like Haiti and Cuba," said Domenica
Davis, a meteorologist for The Weather Channel.
At 11
p.m. ET, Matthew was a category 4 hurricane with maximum sustained winds near
145 mph, the National Hurricane Center said. It was 255 miles south-southeast
of Kingston, Jamaica, which was already being swamped with torrents of rain,
and it was moving north at about 5 mph.
The National Hurricane Center called
Matthew "extremely dangerous," and conditions look favorable for it
to maintain its strength, said Michael Lowry, a hurricane specialist for The
Weather Channel.
"It's kind of a resilient
hurricane — it hasn't really wavered much in terms of its strength," Lowry
said Sunday night. "It's a little bit unusual to go 48 hours with a
category 4 or 5 hurricane and not to see some sort of fluctuation."
The center of the storm was expected
to approach southwestern Haiti and Jamaica on Monday. With it expected to
remain a powerful storm into at least Tuesday, hurricane warnings were in
effect for all of Jamaica and Haiti and for the Cuban provinces of Guantanamo,
Santiago de Cuba, Holguin, Granma and Las Tunas.
"It's
all in God's hands," said Sister Joanne Belmonte of the Missionaries of
the Poor, a Jamaican Catholic relief organization.
"There's no point in worrying,
because if it's going to come, it's going to come" she said. "But you
would be foolish if you didn't prepare for it."
The U.S. government began preparations to airlift
hundreds of people from its naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Haiti, where as
much as 25 inches of rain is expected, reaching 40 inches in isolated areas,
began evacuating residents by boat from outlying islands.
The U.S.
Agency for International Development said Sunday night that it had deployed two
disaster response teams to Haiti and Jamaica as the hurricane center warned
that the raging rainfall will likely produce life-threatening flash floods and
mudslides.
Davis said Matthew will eventually
make its way to the Bahamas by Wednesday, but after that, it's too early to
know whether it will head for the U.S. East Coast or make its way out to sea.
Florida Gov. Rick Scott was taking no
chances, calling the storm "catastrophic" and urging residents to be
prepared.
"If
it hits our state, we could see impacts that we have not seen in many
years," Scott said.
Matthew has killed at least two
people so far: a 67-year-old man who was swept away by a stream in Uribia,
Colombia, and a 16-year-old boy who was crushed by a boulder on the island of
St. Vincent.
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