Hurricane Paloma leveled hundreds of homes along Cuba’s southern coast before rapidly losing steam over land on Sunday, weakening from a dangerous Category 4 storm into a tropical depression in less than a day.
Crashing surf and a powerful sea surge sent waves almost 1km inland as the storm ravaged Santa Cruz del Sur, the coastal community where it roared ashore on Saturday night.
Javier Ramos said he rebuilt his simple wood-frame house in Santa Cruz del Sur after Hurricane Ike struck in early September, only to watch Paloma flatten it again.
PHOTO: AFP
“At least we’re alive, but my wife hasn’t seen this yet,” Ramos said as he scavenged bits of clothing and smashed dishes in his front yard. “I don’t know how she’s going to react. It’s going to be terrible.”
More than 3m-high waves washed away nearly all traces of about 50 modest houses in Santa Cruz del Sur. Civil Defense authorities said altogether 435 homes in the community were destroyed.
Authorities said that the late-season storm toppled a major communications tower, interrupted electricity and phone service, but no storm-related deaths were reported.
Cuba had feared that Paloma could cripple its recovery from Gustav and Ike, hurricanes that struck this summer, causing about US$9.4 billion in damage and destroying nearly a third of the island’s crops. But Vicente de la O of Cuba’s national power company said damage to the power grid was far less than that caused by the previous two hurricanes.
Paloma was a Category 4 hurricane when it hit Santa Cruz del Sur, but quickly lost strength. The US National Hurricane Center in Miami reported that by Sunday morning, the Cuban and Bahamian governments had discontinued all warnings associated with it.
By late Sunday night, Paloma’s center was 70km north of the colonial city of Camaguey and was moving northward at 5kph. Its remnants were expected to emerge off the north coast of Cuba yesterday morning, the center said.
Once as strong as 230kph, the storm’s winds had weakened to 45kph.
Near Santa Cruz del Sur, flooding submerged homes up to their flimsy metal roofs and washed out banana crops and other farmland, though there were no official estimates on the immediate effects to the national food reserves.
Angel Betancourt was skinning a drowned goat at his home in the town.
“The water was up to a meter high and the goat drowned,” he said. “What else can we do? We’re going to eat it.”
Yulaidi Alcala, a 22-year-old office worker, lost everything except the clothes she was wearing and a pair of light bulbs she salvaged from the ruins of her home.
“The pain is so great, I’ve cried so much,” she said. “I’ve lost everything. Everything.”
Touring the area, Cuban Vice President Jose Ramon Machado Ventura said Santa Cruz del Sur was among the hardest-hit nationwide.
Cuba balked at US offers of humanitarian aid after Gustav and Ike and Machado Ventura said the country would take the same position if Washington pledged more help after Paloma.
Fidel Castro wrote in an essay that crops planted to replenish the island’s dwindling food supply after Hurricanes Ike and Gustav would likely be destroyed by Paloma, noting “many crops that were expected soon, countless hours of human sacrifice, gasoline, seeds, fertilizer, herbicides and the work of labor teams to produce food urgently, will be lost anew.”
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