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»Ian«: Florida is struggling with damage – hurricane continues to rage in South Carolina

2022-09-30T19:30:42.568Z


At least 21 people have lost their lives as a result of »Ian«. On Key Largo there are probably even crocodiles swimming on the streets, the water is so high there. Now the hurricane is moving on – at 140 kilometers per hour.


Enlarge image

Boats in Florida

Photo: RICARDO ARDUENGO / AFP

After the severe devastation caused by Hurricane "Ian" in Florida, the state is struggling with the massive storm damage.

Nearly two million homes were still without power, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said on Friday.

Several districts were largely cut off from the power grid, one almost completely.

Thousands of people sought shelter in emergency shelters.

Florida authorities are currently estimating that at least 21 people have died from the storm.

However, there is still no clarity about these numbers, emphasized Kevin Guthrie, director of the Florida Emergency Management Authority.

The storm meanwhile reached the state of South Carolina near the city of Georgetown as the next coastal region with wind speeds of 140 kilometers per hour.

Meteorologists warned of floods and storm surges that could be a good two meters high.

In many places in Florida, streets were under water, houses were razed, bridges were destroyed or boats washed ashore, as in Fort Myers.

Helicopter footage showed burning houses between flooded streets or properties from which the buildings were completely washed away.

On Key Largo, one of the islands in the Florida Keys chain of islands in the very south of the state, the water in the streets is so deep that crocodiles swim in them, the newspaper "Miami Herald" wrote.

On Sanibel Island, the bridge connecting it to the mainland was destroyed.

DeSantis said the images of the devastation were at times depressing.

Authorities warned residents of flooded areas about dangers in the water such as pollutants from the sewage system, chemicals - or even alligators.

Broken electricity and gas lines could also cost lives.

Large parts of Cuba remain without electricity

US President Joe Biden expressed dire fears on Thursday, saying, "This could be the deadliest hurricane in Florida history." State officials were cautious about the estimated death toll.

Authorities chief Guthrie said on Friday that 21 deaths had been reported, but most had not been finally confirmed.

Other cases still need to be investigated.

In the case of natural disasters of this type, it is generally not easy to determine whether a death is directly related to the storm or has other reasons.

As a Category 4 hurricane, "Ian" made landfall in Florida on Wednesday with wind speeds of up to 240 kilometers per hour.

It left destruction and flooding in its wake across the southern state.

Ian had weakened to a tropical storm as it made its way through Florida, but then grew back to a force one hurricane over the ocean.

On Tuesday, "Ian" was a category three out of five hurricane that made landfall in Cuba and caused severe damage there.

At least three people died, according to the government.

Large parts of the Caribbean state were still without electricity on Friday.

dop/dpa

Source: spiegel

All life articles on 2022-09-30

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