Hurricane Melissa Begins Lashing Jamaica
Digest more
Hurricane Melissa track update: Monster Category 5 storm bears down on Jamaica, will it threaten US?
As of 4 a.m. CDT Tuesday, the eye of Category 5 Hurricane Melissa was located about 115 miles west-southwest of Kingston, Jamaica (on the eastern side of the island), and was tracking to the north-northeast at 5 mph.
Cuba is bracing for Hurricane Melissa as it heads towards Santiago de Cuba, the island’s second-largest city, threatening catastrophic damage at a time the government is already failing to provide the most basic services and thousands are sick because of the rise of mosquito-transmitted diseases and other illnesses linked to poor sanitary conditions.
Historic, life-threatening flash flooding and landslides are expected in portions of Jamaica, southern Haiti and the Dominican Republic through the weekend, the NHC said. Peak storm surge heights could reach 9 to 13 feet above normal tide levels when the storm makes landfall, accompanied by large and powerfully destructive waves.
Eastern Cuba braced on Monday (October 27) for Hurricane Melissa, as the Category 5 hurricane churned toward the island after passing over Jamaica, in what could be one of the strongest storms on record for the Caribbean island.
Jamaica is expected to be in the storm's eyewall, which refers to the band of dense clouds surrounding the eye of the hurricane. The eyewall generally produces the fiercest winds and heaviest rainfall, according to Deanna Hence, a professor of climate, meteorology and atmospheric sciences at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.
Melissa has already killed three people in Haiti and Jamaica each and one person in the Dominican Republic. United Nations staff are preparing to deploy to Cuba and Jamaica this week as the region nervously awaits landfall of Hurricane Melissa.