RESCUE workers in Haiti struggled to reach cutoff towns and learn the full extent of the death and destruction caused by Hurricane Matthew as the storm began battering the Bahamas on Wednesday and triggered large-scale evacuations along the US East Coast.
At least 11 deaths were blamed on the powerful storm during its week-long march across the Caribbean, five of them in Haiti. But with a key bridge washed out, roads impassable and phone communications down, the western tip of Haiti was isolated and there was no full accounting of the dead and injured in Matthew's wake.
After moving past Haiti, Matthew rolled across the eastern corner of Cuba and then began pounding the southern Bahamas with winds of 120mph and heavy rain on a course expected to take it near to Nassau.
Forecasters said the storm could hit or come dangerously close to Florida late on Thursday or early Friday and then scrape the East Coast up to the Carolinas over the weekend. Matthew could become the first major hurricane to blow ashore in the US since Wilma slashed across Florida in 2005.
On Tuesday, Matthew swept across a remote area of Haiti with 145mph winds, wrecking homes and swamping roads. But government leaders in the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere said they were not close to fully gauging the effect in the flood-prone nation where less powerful storms have killed thousands.
"What we know is that many, many houses have been damaged. Some lost rooftops and they'll have to be replaced, while others were totally destroyed," Interior Minister Francois Anick Joseph said.
Mourad Wahba, the United Nations secretary-general's deputy special representative for Haiti, said at least 10,000 people were in shelters and hospitals were overflowing. He called the hurricane the biggest humanitarian crisis in Haiti since the devastating earthquake of 2010.
Aid groups with representatives in the area said it was clear that many homes and crops were destroyed but that the extent was impossible to gauge, especially in the Grand Anse area on the southern tip, which took a direct hit. "We have people in Grand Anse that we cannot reach," Hervil Cherubin, country director for Heifer International, a non-profit organisation that works with local farmers.
While the capital, Port-au-Prince, was essentially back to normal on Wednesday, there was still widespread flooding across southern Haiti.
"There's absolutely nothing we can do to protect ourselves here," said motorcycle taxi driver Joseph Paul as he watched torrents of brown water wash over a road and deluge his low-lying neighbourhood in Leogane. "This storm was too much for us, and we are at its mercy."
The US government said it sent experts to Haiti to assess the damage and is providing $1.5 million in food and other disaster assistance.
The hurricane also blew across the sparsely populated tip of Cuba overnight, destroying dozens of homes in the country's easternmost city, Baracoa, and damaging hundreds of others.
People stood amid the rubble of their homes, weeping, hugging or staring stunned into the distance. Others scoured piles of concrete and rebar for any possessions they could recover. Some carried cooking pots and rolled-up mattresses through the streets on their way to a shelter.
"I've never seen something like this in my life," said Elva Perez, a 55-year-old homemaker, as she stood by what remained of her home. "For more than 200 years, here in this house, nothing like this has ever happened."
At the US naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, the storm knocked down trees and caused road flooding but no injuries or major damage, said Julie Ripley, a spokeswoman.
At 2pm on Wednesday Matthew was centered about 70 miles south of Long Island in the eastern Bahamas. It was heading northwest at 12mph.
Along the US East Coast, people boarded up beach homes, some schools closed and residents began clearing out.
South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley announced plans to evacuate a quarter-million people from the coast, not counting tourists, starting on Wednesday afternoon. Florida's Broward County, which includes Fort Lauderdale, asked some 150,000 residents in low-lying areas or mobile homes to move to safety.
Florida Governor Rick Scott urged other coastal residents potentially in harm's way to leave as well. "If you're able to go early, leave now," he said.
DAVID MCFADDEN, Associated Press
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