The eerie online silence from the tiny Caribbean islands ravaged by Hurricane Irma

The eerie online silence from the tiny Caribbean islands ravaged by Hurricane Irma

The last message Michelle Pickering heard from her mother on Tortola terrified her: “The porch roof fly off,” she said in a text. It was 12:58 p.m. on Wednesday, and the worst of Irma was about to hit the island where she grew up.

[Irma’s destructive path: ‘When you look at the carnage, you ask how anybody at all survived’]

Michelle Pickering
Pickering couldn’t sleep that night. In the morning, there was still nothing from her mother or her stepfather. “I tried calling my mom’s number about 20 times,” she said by phone on Friday from Georgia, where she now lives. “It’s nothing, just ringing and ringing and ringing.” Until Irma, Pickering spoke with her mother every day.

“I’m just devastated,” she said. “I’m terrified. What a way to end a text.”

Slowly, Pickering heard from one sibling on the island, and then another. Each said the island was destroyed, and it would be impossible for them to get to her mother’s house, which was on top of a hill in Cane Garden Bay, a different part of the island. So Pickering turned to Facebook to see if someone, anyone, had seen her mother.

“I’m looking for Ishmael Harrigan and wife in Cane Garden Bay on the hill. Please, please … help me. I’m worried!,” she wrote. She was crying as she wrote it, but it felt good, in a way, to try to do something.

Her message was posted to a quickly-growing Facebook group, ““BVI Abroad — Hurricane Irma” where family members and friends with relatives in the British Virgin Islands were trying the best they could to get and share information. In the days after Irma hit, some heard short messages from their loved ones on Tortola. But for many, there has been only an eerie silence.

In 2017, we often take our ability to communicate instantly with each other for granted. Facebook allows us to peer through the baby pictures of near strangers from college with whom we are somehow still “friends.” Its Live map is an effortless facilitator of global lurking: Just pick a country, pull up a feed and get a real-time view into a stranger’s life. This connectivity helped to drive rescue efforts in Texas in the aftermath of Harvey. But when Irma hit the Caribbean, its physical damage to the islands came paired with a near total-destruction of access to the technology that makes this possible.

As reports of the devastation on islands like Tortola or St. Thomas, or Barbuda and St. Martin trickled out, those abroad began to scour the Internet for clues of their loved ones — or for people who might be able to help them get some news.

***

Rob Browne was supposed to leave St. Thomas, one of the U.S. Virgin Islands, on Thursday. He lives near Boston; the trip to St. Thomas was a short family vacation. When Irma hit, he was as lucky as someone could get trapped on a tropical island during a catastrophic storm. The house he’d rented was made of sturdy poured concrete, on top of a hill. And when the storm passed, he realized he was even luckier: His phone was getting access to data, enough to update his family and friends with a brief Facebook live. The connection was spotty, but it worked just well enough.

It also gave him bragging rights. He and his wife work for competing telecommunications companies. It was his company — AT&T — that still had a signal there.
Browne didn’t know it at the time, but he was one of the only people able to broadcast live from St. Thomas in the first hours after Irma did its worst. It didn’t take long for those abroad, looking for information on loved ones who were on the island, to find his stream.
“What side of the island are you on Rob? I’m looking for my Mom and stepdad on the South side near Bolongo Bay,” one comment on his Live video read.

Another: “Rob — are you near the Beachcomber Hotel near airport? Looking for friends husband who manages the hotel.”

And another: “Rob what side are you Im looking for my nephews they are in the south side in the Antilles School zone in Hawk hill rd please if you know somethig for that area i will really appreciate.”

Others sent him private messages, dozens of them, asking for help tracking down silent friends and relatives. He did what he could to help. “We had one guy down the street, his family was reaching out because he’s on dialysis,” Browne said in a phone interview on Friday (the man was Okay). Some people just needed someone to talk to, so he did that too, as he and his teenage son began clearing the road outside their home of debris.

An image of one of the messages Browne was sent, published with permission of the sender. Her friend is Okay.
Browne is a stranger to the island, but his spotty access to the Internet has helped him become a vital conduit for those looking for information on nearby families. When he gets a request, Browne pulls up the Waze app and looks to see how far the address in question is from his own. If he can get there, he tries. But the roads are blocked anywhere past a quarter mile from the house.

He can’t do much to help with many of the requests — people looking for news from the south side of the island, or even from one of the damaged houses across the water that he can see from the balcony of his rental. Just as those abroad are cut off from the island, the people on St. Thomas are similarly cut off from each other.


“I had a false sense of security,” Browne said. “We have phones, social media. When a storm like this hits, we’re back to very basic, neighbor-to-neighbor passing along information. It’s the old telephone game,” he said. There’s little concrete information in those passed-along messages. Many are rumors. He tries to be careful with what he tells the thousands who now watch his regular Live videos — he wouldn’t want to spread a message that was wrong.

***Source Washington Post

Facebook has a feature — Safety Check — designed for situations like Irma, allowing people in the immediate area of a disaster to “check in” as safe. But Irma had turned the islands back to a different era of communication: one before cellphones, when if the landlines were down you were out of luck.

So the administrators of “BVI Abroad — Hurricane Irma” created their own. On the islands hit by Irma, sometimes it was a stranger with a lucky connection who would know first whether a loved one was okay. The BVI Safety Check database has thousands of entries, some marked safe, some still looking for information.

Courtesy of Jenny Ruffell Smith.
One of the administrators of the Facebook group is Jenny Ruffell Smith, who grew up in the British Virgin Islands but now lives in Australia. Her mother, niece and older brother live on the islands. In the lead-up to Irma, they were in constant communication about the logistics of preparing for the storm. After Irma hit, Smith heard nothing for 24 hours.

“You want to be positive and hope for the best, but at the same time you’re also thinking the worst and feeling absolutely helpless half a world away from everything you know and love,” Smith said in an interview over Facebook Messenger. “I have never wanted to speak to my Mum as much as I do now.”

The first messages came from her brother and niece, through a group family chat on WhatsApp:

“Hi all only have WiFi for a second,” her niece wrote. “We had a major hit. Island looks destroyed from here. But mum Zach and I are safe.”

Her brother wrote: “Alive just. Total devastation. Lost everything.”

[Isolated by Irma, British Virgin Islands don’t know what will come first — help or Hurricane Jose]

Later, she heard about her mother from a stranger who went door-to-door in her neighborhood checking on each house. The stranger found Smith on Facebook, and sent her a message, letting her know her mother was okay. Many hours later, her mother was able to send a text herself.

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Others, like Pickering, are closely monitoring every feed from their home islands for information. Pickering figured out that people on Tortola were making their way to the two spots on the island that had WiFi to connect with the outside world. There’s a spot in Road Town, and another outside of a telecommunications building. She views messages coming in from these places, hoping to spot someone who might know her mom or live nearby.

“If you know that they live next to somebody that you know, you ask them, ‘hey is so and so okay?’,” she said. But this process takes time, which Pickering fears she does not have. Another hurricane, Jose, is approaching.

“Jose is said to be on its way by Saturday. Tomorrow!” she said. “And it’s yesterday that people started to find out that they were okay.”

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LIVESTREAM Hurricane Irma: Florida evacuates as damaging 130mph winds arrive – latest news

Hurricane Irma: Florida evacuates as damaging 130mph winds arrive – latest news

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Irma makes landfall on Cuba, strengthens to category 5
Hurricane Irma: death toll, devastation and predicted path - everything we know
In pictures: the Caribbean destroyed
Region faces new threat from Hurricane Jose in same path
Island by island: How Irma brought havoc to paradise
British response to Hurricane Irma 'found wanting'
Foreign Office hotline for people affected: 020 7008 0000
Strong "damaging" wind and rain from Hurricane Irma's outer bands began lashing Florida's southern tip Saturday morning forecasters issue dire warnings of a potentially deadly storm surge from the Category 4 storm.

Hurricane Irma pounded Cuba's northern coast on Saturday as it headed for Florida, where millions of residents were told to evacuate after the storm killed 22 people in the Caribbean and left devastation in its wake.

Still a Category 5 storm when it crashed into Cuba in the early hours of Saturday, Irma weakened slightly to a Category 5 as it tore along the island's northern coastline, downing power lines, bending palm trees and sending huge waves crashing over sea walls.
As many as 5.6 million people were told to evacuate from Florida - more than a quarter of the state's population. At least 540,000 people in parts of Georgia were also told to flee as the storm headed towards the American mainland.

"This is a storm that will kill you if you don't get out of the way," said National Hurricane Center meteorologist and spokesman Dennis Feltgen.

Feltgen said the storm has a really wide eye, with hurricane-force winds that cover the entire Florida peninsula and potentially deadly storm surges on both coasts.

Tom Bossert, US homeland security adviser, said: "Please listen to your local authorities.

"You need to evacuate from south to north – that is a staggered and carefully thought-out process.

"There will come a point where you are on your own."

In West Palm Beach police are going door to door, urging people to obey the mandatory evacuation order.

Rick Scott, the governor of Florida, said they were working to ensure that fuel was available for cars to get to shelters. He told people they should not wait, and should leave now.

Irma claimed its first victim in Florida, even before making landfall, when a 57-year-old man fell from a ladder while fitting storm shutters at his home.

Meanwhile, extra troops were sent to the devastated holiday island of Saint-Martin on Friday to control serious looting, as three RAF planes began ferrying troops and equipment to hard-hit British territories. UK Marines have also arrived on Anguilla to begin repairing buildings.

As Irma cuts through the Caribbean, two other storms in the region have been upgraded to hurricane status: Katia in the Gulf of Mexico and Jose, which is following Irma in the Atlantic and has made landfall in eastern Mexico. However it had weakened to a Category 1 storm.

The Red Cross said an estimated 1.2 million people have already been affected by Irma and that figure could rise sharply to 26 million, amid fears disease could spread in areas where drinking water and sanitation services have broken down.

US President Donald Trump said in a videotaped statement that Irma was "a storm of absolutely historic destructive potential" and called on people to heed recommendations from government officials and law enforcement.Source The Telegraph UK

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AT LEAST 2,400 DUTCH TRAVELERS IN HURRICANE IRMA AREAS: TRAVEL AGENCY TUI

AT LEAST 2,400 DUTCH TRAVELERS IN HURRICANE IRMA AREAS: TRAVEL AGENCY TUI

At least 2,400 Dutch travelers are currently in the areas that will soon face the wrath of Hurricane Irma, according to travel agency TUI, NU.nl reports.

Around 1,600 Dutch are on Cuba and the Dominican Republic. They booked trips through TUI subsidiary Kras. The other 800 are in the American state of Florida.

TUI also has four travelers on Sint Maarten, where Hurricane Irma hit on Wednesday, leaving devastation in its wake. TUI managed to make contact with all four Dutch and they are doing well.

The local authorities evacuated some places in the areas that will soon be hit by Irma, according to TUI. The company is keeping in touch with the authorities to monitor the situation.

People in the Netherlands worried about friends or family members who are in Cuba, the Dominican Republic or Florida through TUI, can get information at the company’s contact center. The telephone number is: 088-0885885

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With family stuck in St. Martin, Montreal man wants feds to rescue Canadians trapped in Hurricane Irma’s wreck

With family stuck in St. Martin, Montreal man wants feds to rescue Canadians trapped in Hurricane Irma’s wreck

With family stuck in St. Martin, Montreal man wants feds to rescue Canadians trapped in Hurricane Irma's wreck

With family stuck in St. Martin, Montreal man wants feds to rescue Canadians trapped in Hurricane Irma’s wreck

A Montreal man with family in St. Martin is calling on the federal government to send helicopters to rescue Canadians trapped on the Caribbean island, which was ravaged by Hurricane Irma and is in the crosshairs of another hurricane.

Olivier Dionne’s sister Melissa has been living on the French side of the island, which is split between Dutch and French control, for a year with her husband and two young children.

He said he received a text message from her yesterday saying they are alive, but he has no word on injuries or how they are doing.

Olivier and Melissa Dionne
Melissa Dionne (right) sent her brother Olivier a message saying she was alive following the hurricane, but hasn’t sent him anything since. (Submitted by Olivier Dionne)

He isn’t sure where his sister is staying. He said as far as he knows, their house was damaged but may still be standing.

Dionne says as news emerged of other governments, such as the U.S., taking steps to rescue stranded citizens, he called the department of Global Affairs to see if Canada will do the same.

He said he was told Canada has no plans to intervene, but the representative took his sister’s information in case anything changes.

He said he isn’t happy with that response, especially considering Hurricane Jose is supposed to hit tomorrow. Since Irma destroyed the majority of the buildings on the French side of the island, many people don’t have a place to hide from what’s coming.

“No one’s taking action. They’re stranded, everyone is talking about having troops, but no one’s moving. There are Canadians right now that need to be rescued,” he said, his voice shaking.

In a statement, Global Affairs Canada spokesperson Brianne Maxwell did not address whether Canada had plans to go get citizens who are trapped, saying instead that the government is providing consular assistance to those who need it.

She added that Global Affairs Canada advises against all travel to the regions in the path of Hurricane Irma, but those who do go there should be prepared, have a plan and follow the advice of local authorities.

‘No gas and it’s gridlock’ as hundreds of thousands in Florida flee Irma
Stuck in the path of Hurricane Irma? Here are key facts and contacts you need
Death toll could rise

French Interior Minister Gerard Collomb says Hurricane Irma has left at least nine people dead, seven missing and 112 injured on the French Caribbean islands of St. Martin and St. Barthelemy and urged coastal residents to take shelter as Jose approaches.

Collomb told reporters Friday that the death toll could rise as more emergency workers continue to search the area.

He said France is shuttling security forces, emergency workers and aid to the islands before the next storm hits Saturday night. He said the top priority is to “save the population and restore order” after looting broke out in some areas.

Dionne said other people he knows who are in St. Martin are posting the videos showing people looting stores, and what sounds like shots being fired in the background.

While the U.S. is looking into getting citizens off St. Martin, Canada says it has no plans to do the same

“I’m very worried right now,” he said.

René Lépine, the president of a Quebec-based real estate firm who lives in St. Martin, witnessed the looting first-hand and likened scenes on the streets to “anarchy.”

He said he was punched in the face by someone who was trying to grab his camera while he was taking photos.

Lépine said he is encouraged that Dutch marines are arriving on the island and he’s hoping authorities will soon get a handle on the situation.

“If it does not get under control, I will be looking for a way out. I don’t have a choice. I’ve got to survive this.”

Still no word

The French rescue operation includes military frigates, military and civilian planes and helicopters. Collomb has said 100,000 food rations were sent to St. Barthelemy and St. Martin, the equivalent of four days of supplies.

Dionne said his family members have no electricity, not much drinking water, no Wi-Fi or cellphone service.

“Sending food is important, I understand, sending medical attention for people who are injured on the island is important, but there’s a serious matter right now. There’s a hurricane hitting in 24 hours, and no one is talking about that.”

Some people had access to their phones for a few minutes yesterday, which is how his sister managed to send him the message, but she hasn’t contacted him since.

The U.S. Consulate General in Curacao said it believes about 6,000 Americans are stranded on St. Martin. It said it was working with the U.S. and other governments to try to figure out how to get the Americans off the island either by air or boat.

 

 

Source CBC Canada

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State Sen. Iris Martinez stranded on Caribbean island of St. Martin after Hurricane Irma

State Sen. Iris Martinez is stranded on the Caribbean island of St. Martin in the wake of Hurricane Irma and is awaiting rescue, her office said Friday.

state

state senator-martinez-hurricane-irma-met-20170908-story.html

The Chicago Democrat was at the Oyster Bay Beach Resort for a “much-needed days off after this whole mess in Springfield,” administrative assistant Sonia Sanchez said. Martinez’s office had not heard from her since Wednesday before getting a call Friday morning.

John Patterson, a spokesman for Senate President John Cullerton, said late Friday afternoon that arrangements were being finalized to have her and others evacuated from the island.

Earlier in the week, Sanchez said Martinez told her office she felt confident the resort was prepared for hurricanes. When she called Friday Martinez “said (the hurricane) was horrible,” Sanchez said.

“I think her biggest fear right now is that … Hurricane Jose is on its way there as well,” Sanchez said, referring to a separate storm approaching the Caribbean. “They’re trying to get these people evacuated before Jose gets there.”

At least five people died on St. Martin, an island split between the Dutch Sint Maarten and French St. Martin. Homes were splintered, schools were destroyed and the cafes and clothing shops of the French seaside village of Marigot were submerged in floodwaters.

Hurricane Irma devastates British Virgin Islands; local family loses home
Authorities reported gunfire amid looting of televisions as well as food and water. Sint Maarten Prime Minister William Marlin said the government anticipates a serious housing shortage and is already fretting over a lost tourist season.

“We foresee a loss of the tourist season because of the damage that was done to hotel properties, the negative publicity that one would have that it’s better to go somewhere else because it’s destroyed — so that will have a serious impact on our economy,” he said in an interview with the Dutch military.

Martinez’s office believes there are 147 Americans at the Oyster Bay resort, which is on the Dutch part of the island, awaiting rescue. There’s supposed to be a private plane airlifting people, Sanchez said, though they don’t know who sent the plane. Martinez didn’t say whether she was injured in any way, Sanchez said.

“I can’t even imagine what must be going through their minds right now,” Sanchez said. “I think the worst part is that, just having lost communication with the rest of the world, that feeling nobody knows we’re here, does anybody know? Is anybody coming?”

Hurricane Irma back to Category 5, will ‘devastate the United States,’ officials warn
The Associated Press contributed.

gpratt@chicagotribune.com

Twitter @royalpratt

Copyright © 2017, Chicago TribuneSource Chicago Tribune

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EMERGENCY AID FOR SINT MAARTEN GETS GOING AS HURRICANE JOSE APPROACHES

EMERGENCY AID FOR SINT MAARTEN GETS GOING AS HURRICANE JOSE APPROACHES

The emergency aid for Sint Maarten is finally on its way after  caused on Wednesday. A plane managed to land at the battered Princess Juliana International Airport and the first Dutch navy ship unloaded its emergency supplies. According to Naval Commander Peter Jan de Vin, they are working as fast as they safely can to get as much as possible done before Hurricane Jose is expected to hit on Saturday, NU.nl reports.Source NLTimes

Hurricane Irma’s death count on the Caribbean islands climbed to 16. A total of five people died on Sint Maarten – one on the Dutch part of the island, the other four on the French side.

The plane landed at the Sint Maarten airport on Thursday night, local time, according to De Vin’s Twitter feed. Only planes able to land without the help of the air traffic control tower can currently use the airport. This test plane carried a small detachment of extra police officers. They will be deployed to help maintain public order and security on the island, according to the newspaper.

On Saturday morning a KLM cargo plane is taking some 60 tons of Red Cross supplies to the island. The Dutch airline made the plane available to the Red Cross free of charge. According to Red Cross spokesperson Merlijn Stoffels, the supplies on board include tarpaulins, generators, jerrycans and solar panels. If there is space left in the plane, drinking water will be added to its load. “The items were paid with money donated to “, Stoffels said to Het Parool. “The generous donors can see what’s happening with their contribution.”

The soldiers present on Sint Maarten are assisting the local police in restoring public order, Minister Ronald Plasterk of Home Affairs and Kingdom Relations said. Another 50 soldiers are on their way from Curacao to Sint Maarten. “Fortunately, we sent soldiers to the island in advance”, the Minister said. The public administration is not functioning at the moment, due to lack of communication, according to Plasterk.

Plasterk spoke with Sint Maarten Prime Minister William Marlin earlier on Thursday. According to the Dutch Minister, Marlin’s top concerns are finding housing for the 40 thousand inhabitants of the island and the availability of medical assistance.

“Many people on Sint Maarten are only trying to survive and doing everything they can to get food and drink. We must keep the masses in check”, former Prime Minister and current parliament chairman Sarah Wescott-Williams said about persistent reports of looting on the island, according to NU.nl. The island urgently needs help. “The devastation of Hurricane Irma on Sint Maarten is so much worse than with all previous hurricanes we experienced”, she said. “We had a huge blow. No one expected this. Everyone is astonished at the hurricane’s power.”

According to calculations by the American National Hurricane Center in Miami, Hurricane Jose will pass close by Antigua and Barbuda on Saturday afternoon, local time, and then along Anguilla and Sint Maarten not much later, before heading north. That means it will hit Sint Maarten by Saturday morning, Dutch time. Jose is expected to be a category 3 hurricane, Irma was a category 5. But with the state that the island is in at present, Jose can be just as devastating as Irma was.

The Ministers involved in arranging emergency relief for the island, are meeting again at the National Crisis Center in The Hague on Friday.

The islands of Saba and Sint Eustatius were also hit by Hurricane Irma on Wednesday, though they sustained less damage than Sint Maarten. Members of the Koninklijke Marechaussee – a policing force that works as part of the Dutch military – are assisting in the clean up on the two islands.

 

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SINT MAARTEN PLAGUED BY LOOTING IN AFTERMATH OF HURRICANE IRMA

SINT MAARTEN PLAGUED BY LOOTING IN AFTERMATH OF HURRICANE IRMA

In addition to the material destruction Hurricane Irma left in its wake, the island of Sint Maarten is now also dealing with looters carrying off whatever they can get their hands on, according to various news sources.

SINT MAARTEN PLAGUED BY LOOTING IN AFTERMATH OF HURRICANE IRMA

SINT MAARTEN PLAGUED BY LOOTING IN AFTERMATH OF HURRICANE IRMA

An eye witness told BNR on Friday morning that armed looters are working in organized groups to take as much as they can. Minister Ronald Plasterk of Home Affairs and Kingdom Relations confirmed the looting, according to Financieele Dagblad.

“Many people on Sint Maarten are only trying to survive and doing everything they can to get food and drink. We must keep the masses in check”, former Prime Minister and current parliament chairman Sarah Wescott-Williams said about the looting on the island, according to NU.nl. The island urgently needs help. “The devastation of Hurricane Irma on Sint Maarten is so much worse than with all previous hurricanes we experienced”, she said. “We had a huge blow. No one expected this. Everyone is astonished at the hurricane’s power.”

But according to local newspaper The Daily Herald, some looters aren’t only going after the necessities. Jewelry stores on Front Street in capital Philipsburg were looted, bikes were stolen from the Harley Davidson store, and the iStore was emptied of mobile phones and tablets. Looters were also seen carrying away televisions and electronics, according tot he newspaper.
[wpvideo 5F7jrgwp]

Front Street – famous for its many shops, resorts and restaurants – is quiet now, but around 9:00 p.m. on Thursday, local time, the streets of Philipsburg were very dangerous, a local resident currently holidaying in Europe told NL Times based on information from her family. She is keeping in touch with them mainly through messages, and phone calls when she can get through.

Groups of armed men were roaming Front Street and looting as far as they went, according to the resident, who asked to remain anonymous. “The customs offices were totally plundered during the day. There are now more and more dangerous and armed people walking around the streets”, she said.

The Dutch government sent soldiers to assist the local police in maintaining public order and give aid where they can. The Pilipsburg resident confirmed that the military and police are present in the city. They were cleaning the streets, but could not control the looting, the woman said to NL Times. “Local police are busy and some looters are armed with pieces of wood in their hands”, she said.

“I lived on this island for many years, and I never saw people like that, like animals”, the local resident said. “No electricity, no water, no house and stealing everything, even TVs.”

Tourism director on the French side of the island, Bernadette Davis, put a plea on Facebook for the looting to stop. “Looting is not us. We are better than that. Please go deep inside and reach for that humanity – that GOD within us and do the right thing. Let us spend our time helping each other”, she wrote. Source NLTimes

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PARIS: Hurricane Irma has wreaked an estimated €1.2 billion (RM 6 billion) worth of damage St Martin And St Barths

Irma damage to St Barts, St Martin estimated at €1.2b
PARIS: Hurricane Irma has wreaked an estimated €1.2 billion (RM 6 billion) worth of damage in the Caribbean territories of St Martin and St Barts, French state-owned reinsurer CCR said Saturday.


“This amount covers damages to homes, vehicles and businesses” insured for natural disasters, CCR said in a statement.

The disaster is “one of the worst experienced by France in 35 years,” it said.

CCR chief Bertrand Labilloy said Friday that the reinsurer had “sufficient reserves to cover the disaster whatever the cost.”

The overall damage across the Caribbean has been estimated at more than US$10 billion.

Sint Maarten, the Dutch part of St Martin, has suffered US$2.5 billion in damage, according to the Center for Disaster Management and Risk Reduction Technology (CEDIM) in Germany.source sundaily

Irma is projected to hit Florida late Saturday, and according to data modelling firm Enki Research the total bill for loss and damage could hit US$120 billion once the United States is included. — AFP

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The Latest: France: 1,100 deployed to help St Maarten island recovery

The Latest: France: 1,100 deployed to help St Maarten island recovery

The Latest on Hurricane Irma (all times local):

6:10 a.m.

France’s Director of Public Safety has held a press conference in Paris on the recovery efforts in the French overseas island territories of Saint Martin and Saint Barthelemy that are reeling from Hurricane Irma.

Jacques Witkowski said Saturday that “there are 1,100 people, both civilian and military, deployed on the islands” to help with recovery.

But he said they were also tasked with evacuation of residents ahead of another hurricane, Jose, which is expected to violently pummel islands in the Caribbean later on Saturday.

Witkowski said the eye of Hurricane Jose will pass close to the islands of Saint Martin and Saint Barthelemy.

———

5:20 a.m.

The National Hurricane Center says Irma has weakened slightly to a Category 4 hurricane, as it moves over the Camaguey Archipelago of Cuba.

Irma had briefly regained Category 5 strength late Friday, but now has maximum sustained winds of 155 mph (249 kph). The hurricane is about 245 miles (394 kilometers) from Miami and moving about 12 mph (19.3 kph) toward the west-northwest.

In the Atlantic, Hurricane Jose is a Category 4 hurricane, about 190 miles (306 kilometers) east-southeast of The Northern Leeward Islands, moving toward the islands at 13 mph (20.92 kph) with winds reaching 150 mph.

In the Gulf of Mexico, Hurricane Katia made landfall late Friday north of Tecolutla, Mexico and weakened to a tropical storm. By early Saturday morning it was 135 miles (217 kilometers) south of Tampico, Mexico, moving sluggishly at only 2 mph (3.2 kph) near the Sierra Madre Mountains with maximum winds of 40 mph (64.4 kph). It was expected to weaken further throughout the day.

———

3:20 a.m.

Dutch marines have dropped flyers from a helicopter warning beleaguered inhabitants on the devastated nation of St. Maarten to head to shelters as Hurricane Jose barrels through the Caribbean.

Jose, a Category 4 storm with 150 mph winds, was forecast to pass close to St. Maarten over the weekend, delivering a second damaging blow to the former Dutch colony that suffered catastrophic damage when Category 5 Hurricane Irma slammed into it on Wednesday.

Peter Jan de Vin, a Dutch military commander on the island of Curacao who is helping coordinate relief efforts on St. Maarten, tweeted a picture Saturday morning of a marine dropping flyers out of a helicopter flying low over one of St. Maarten’s shattered seafront neighborhoods.

———


2:20 a.m.

The National Hurricane Center says the eye of Irma is moving over the Camaguey Archipelago of Cuba as a Category 5 hurricane.

The center says Irma made landfall there late Friday and has maximum sustained winds of 160 mph (257 kph). The hurricane is about 275 miles (443 kilometers) from Miami and moving about 12 mph (19.3 kph) toward the west.

In the Gulf of Mexico, Hurricane Katia made landfall late Friday north of Tecolutla, Mexico and weakened to a tropical storm, with winds reaching 45 mph (72.4 kph).

In the Atlantic, Hurricane Jose is a Category 4 hurricane, about 240 miles (386 kilometers)east-southeast of the Northern Leeward Islands, moving roughly westward at 14 mph (23 kph)with winds reaching 150 mph.

———Source ABC News

12:35 a.m.

A newly strengthened Irma is taking aim at south Florida with 160 mph (257 kph) winds after battering Cuba and leaving more than 20 dead across the Caribbean, as another hurricane follows close behind.

Irma regained Category 5 status late Friday. Thousands of people in the Caribbean fought desperately to find shelter or escape their storm-blasted islands, and more than 6 million people in Florida and Georgia were warned to leave their homes.

Many residents and tourists were left reeling after the storm ravaged some of the world’s most exclusive tropical playgrounds, known for their turquoise waters and lush green vegetation. Among them: St. Martin, St. Barts, St. Thomas, Barbuda and Anguilla.

Irma threatened to push its way northward from one end of Florida to the other beginning Sunday morning.

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The Latest: St Maarten Warned To Take Shelter From Jose, Irma Weakens Again Slightly on Way to Florida

St. John’S, Antigua (AP) — The Latest on Hurricane Irma (all times local):

5:20 a.m.

The National Hurricane Center says Irma has weakened slightly to a Category 4 hurricane, as it moves over the Camaguey Archipelago of Cuba.

Irma had briefly regained Category 5 strength late Friday, but now has maximum sustained winds of 155 mph (249 kph). The hurricane is about 245 miles (394 kilometers) from Miami and moving about 12 mph (19.3 kph) toward the west-northwest.

In the Atlantic, Hurricane Jose is a Category 4 hurricane, about 190 miles (306 kilometers) east-southeast of The Northern Leeward Islands, moving toward the islands at 13 mph (20.92 kph) with winds reaching 150 mph.Source Bloomberg

In the Gulf of Mexico, Hurricane Katia made landfall late Friday north of Tecolutla, Mexico and weakened to a tropical storm. By early Saturday morning it was 135 miles (217 kilometers) south of Tampico, Mexico, moving sluggishly at only 2 mph (3.2 kph) near the Sierra Madre Mountains with maximum winds of 40 mph (64.4 kph). It was expected to weaken further throughout the day.

The Latest: St Maarten Warned To Take Shelter From Jose, Irma Weakens Again Slightly on Way to Florida

The Latest: St Maarten Warned To Take Shelter From Jose, Irma Weakens Again Slightly on Way to Florida

___

3:20 a.m.

Dutch marines have dropped flyers from a helicopter warning beleaguered inhabitants on the devastated nation of St. Maarten to head to shelters as Hurricane Jose barrels through the Caribbean.

Jose, a Category 4 storm with 150 mph winds, was forecast to pass close to St. Maarten over the weekend, delivering a second damaging blow to the former Dutch colony that suffered catastrophic damage when Category 5 Hurricane Irma slammed into it on Wednesday.

Peter Jan de Vin, a Dutch military commander on the island of Curacao who is helping coordinate relief efforts on St. Maarten, tweeted a picture Saturday morning of a marine dropping flyers out of a helicopter flying low over one of St. Maarten’s shattered seafront neighborhoods.

___

2:20 a.m.

The National Hurricane Center says the eye of Irma is moving over the Camaguey Archipelago of Cuba as a Category 5 hurricane.

The center says Irma made landfall there late Friday and has maximum sustained winds of 160 mph (257 kph). The hurricane is about 275 miles (443 kilometers) from Miami and moving about 12 mph (19.3 kph) toward the west.

In the Gulf of Mexico, Hurricane Katia made landfall late Friday north of Tecolutla, Mexico and weakened to a tropical storm, with winds reaching 45 mph (72.4 kph).

In the Atlantic, Hurricane Jose is a Category 4 hurricane, about 240 miles (386 kilometers)east-southeast of the Northern Leeward Islands, moving roughly westward at 14 mph (23 kph)with winds reaching 150 mph.

___

12:35 a.m.

A newly strengthened Irma is taking aim at south Florida with 160 mph (257 kph) winds after battering Cuba and leaving more than 20 dead across the Caribbean, as another hurricane follows close behind.

Irma regained Category 5 status late Friday. Thousands of people in the Caribbean fought desperately to find shelter or escape their storm-blasted islands, and more than 6 million people in Florida and Georgia were warned to leave their homes.

Many residents and tourists were left reeling after the storm ravaged some of the world’s most exclusive tropical playgrounds, known for their turquoise waters and lush green vegetation. Among them: St. Martin, St. Barts, St. Thomas, Barbuda and Anguilla.

Irma threatened to push its way northward from one end of Florida to the other beginning Sunday morning.

Before it’s here, it’s on the Bloomberg Ter
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