At least seven reported dead in Dominica from hurricane hit, State of Emergency declared

Dominica is reporting that at least seven persons were killed after Hurricane Maria ravaged the island on Tuesday.

Communication with the island has been down since early yesterday morning.

This afternoon, Dominican Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit declared a state of emergency and a curfew from 4 pm to 8 pm.

His office said that a French helicopter is on its

Overflights have since been done by the Caribbean Emergency Disaster Relief Agency (CDEMA) which has allowed the devastation to be seen.

Principal Advisor to Dominica’s Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit, Hartley Henry, has relayed a message outlining the dire situation in Dominica following the passage of Hurricane Maria.

Hurricane damage in Dominica (Antigua and Barbuda Broadcasting Service Television/Radio)

Henry, who spoke with Skerrit via Satellite phone, said there’s an urgent need for helicopter services to take food, water and tarpaulins to outer districts for shelter.

 

Hurricane damage in Roseau, Dominica’s capital. This is said to be King’s Lane. (Antigua and Barbuda Broadcasting Service Television/Radio)

FULL TEXT OF HENRY’S MESSAGE

It’s 4:30 a.m. and I just spoke with Prime Minister Skerrit via Satellite phone. He and family are fine. Dominica is not!! Tremendous loss of Housing and Public buildings. The main general hospital took a beating. Patient care has been compromised. Many buildings serving as shelters lost roofs, which means that a very urgent need now is tarpaulins and other roofing materials. Little contact has been made with the outer communities but persons who walked 10 and 15 miles towards the city of Roseau from various outer districts report total destruction of homes, some roadways and crops.

Urgent helicopter services are needed to take food, water and tarpaulins to outer districts for shelter. Canefield airport can accommodate helicopter landings and it is expected that from today, the waters around the main Roseau port will be calm enough to accommodate vessels bringing relief supplies and other forms of assistance.

It’s difficult to determine the level of fatalities but so far seven are confirmed, as a direct result of the hurricane. That figure, the Prime Minister fears, will rise as he wades his way into the rural communities today, Wednesday. The urgent needs now are roofing materials for shelters, bedding supplies for hundreds stranded in or outside what’s left of their homes and food and water drops for residents of outlying districts inaccessible at the moment.

The tarmac at Mellville Hall was not too badly damaged so the strip should be opened in a day or two for larger relief planes to land. The Prime Minister is hoping to make contact with ABS Radio in Antigua this morning to speak directly to the outer world as to the state of Dominica and its urgent needs.

The country is in a daze – no electricity, no running water -as a result of uprooted pipes in most communities and definitely to landline or cellphone services on island, and that will be for quite a while.

In summary, the island has been devastated. The housing stock significantly damaged or destroyed. All available public buildings are being used as shelters; with very limited roofing materials evident. The country needs the support and continued help and prayers of all. Will update further as new information is received.

Maria exploded very quickly to Category Five status

NBC News meteorologist Bill Karins said that Maria was one of the fastest intensifying hurricanes ever recorded. It blew up from a tropical storm into a major Category 5 hurricane in barely more than a day.

“Dominica had very little time to prepare for this monster,” Karins added. “[It was] the strongest storm of their lifetimes.”

Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency footage of the damage on Dominica.