Thanks for joining us for our live coverage of Hurricane Melissa, which is expected to make landfall in Cuba after tearing through Jamaica earlier today. Here’s a recap on the weather event labelled the “storm of the century” in the Caribbean:
- Melissa made landfall in Jamaica about 4am AEDT, as one of the most powerful storms ever observed in the Atlantic and the strongest to hit the island nation since records began 174 years ago.
- Catastrophic winds up to 300km/h have left three-quarters of Jamaicans without power, and destroyed homes, businesses and hospitals. The scale of devastation will likely not be known for many days yet.
- The hurricane is heading out to sea and is expected to maintain category 3 strength or even intensify to category 4
- Cuba is next in the storm’s firing line. Catastrophic flash flooding and multiple landslides are forecast, with President Miguel Diaz-Canel warning of a “very difficult night” for the Caribbean nation. More than 735,000 people have been evacuated ahead of the hurricane’s predicted landfall in Cuba this evening (AEDT).
This is where we’ll leave our live coverage for now. We will have updates in tomorrow’s rolling live news coverage and stories in the Extreme Weather topic page. Thank you for your company.