Headlines
Hurricane kills 264, Obama declares emergency
Washington, Oct 7
The death toll from
Hurricane Matthew, which barrelled towards the southeastern United
States, in Haiti has climbed to 264, authorities said, forcing the US
President Barack Obama to declare a state of emergency.
Emergency
officials in Haiti's Sud province, which bore the brunt of the storm's
impact, provided the new fatality figure just hours after Interior
Minister Francois Anick Joseph cited a provisional death toll of 108.
Matthew,
the most powerful hurricane to strike the Caribbean since 2007, made
landfall in southwestern Haiti on Tuesday as a Category 4 storm with
maximum sustained winds of 230 kph.
A partial evaluation
indicates that more than 20,000 homes were severely damaged, Joseph
said, describing the storm's impact as a "catastrophe."
The search for additional casualties continues, authorities said.
Most of the victims were killed by falling trees, flying debris and swollen rivers.
Due
to the emergency declaration in Florida, the Department of Homeland
Security and Federal Emergency Management Agency are authorised to
coordinate all disaster relief efforts, Xinhua news agency reported.
Meanwhile,
local authorities issued a mandatory evacuation order on Thursday for
nearly 1.5 million coastal residents in preparation for the hurricane,
one of the most powerful storms to hit the region in a decade.
"This storm will kill you. We don't have much time left," said Florida Governor Rick Scott at a press conference.
According
to the US National Hurricane Centre in Miami, Florida, Hurricane
Matthew remained a Category 3 hurricane as of Thursday morning.
There
was still possibility that it would evolve into a Category 4 storm in
approaching the east coast of Florida, said the Centre.
Matthew
is now moving on to the coast of the US. The US National Weather Service
warned on Thursday that the hurricane could be the worst storm seen in
Florida for decades. Over 2 million people have been ordered to evacuate
coastal areas.












