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'A worst-case scenario': Category 5 Hurricane Melissa brings flooding and catastrophic winds to Jamaica

'A worst-case scenario': Category 5 Hurricane Melissa brings flooding and catastrophic winds to Jamaica
SLOWLY. THANK YOU KELLY ANN FOR THAT AND OUR COVERAGE CONTINUES NOW WITH SARAH AND SARAH. WE KNOW YOU SPOKE WITH A MAN WHOSE FAMILY IS IN JAMAICA. YEAH, FRIGHTENING IMAGES TO WATCH FROM A DISTANCE. BEN AND ERIKA. HE IS A NATIVE. HE LIVES IN NATICK RIGHT NOW, BUT HE’S ORIGINALLY FROM JAMAICA. HE HAS LOTS OF FAMILY MEMBERS STILL THERE WHO ARE RIGHT NOW IN THE THROES OF HURRICANE MELISSA. I TALKED TO MARK. YOU KNOW, THINGS ARE FALLING APART AS WE SPEAK. DELROY ALLEN IS A TENNIS COACH IN WAYLAND ON HIS PHONE NOW, CONSTANTLY CHECKING ON LOVED ONES IN JAMAICA. WHAT DAMAGE HAPPENED TO THEM, WHERE THEY ARE HUNKERING DOWN IN A HOTEL ALLEN OWNS, UPGRADED TO A HURRICANE. WIN. MOVE MOVE MOVE MOVE TO A DIFFERENT LOCATION. HE’S COMING BACK IN. COMMUNICATION IS SPORADIC, BUT ALLEN’S COUSIN SHOWS US THE VIEW OUTSIDE MONTEGO BAY. A SCARY WOBURN WE ARE JUST HERE WAITING TO SEE THE OUTCOME OF IT. THERE’S ALREADY DAMAGE TO THE HOTEL PROPERTY, BUT ALLEN IS FOCUSED ON EVERYONE’S SAFETY. YOU KNOW, I LOT OF GUESS THERE ARE A LOT OF FAMILY, AND I JUST WANT TO MAKE SURE EVERYONE IS SAFE AND GET OUT OF THIS, YOU KNOW, TERRIBLE HURRICANE WINDS NOW UP TO 150MPH. MATTHEW CAPPUCCI IS A METEOROLOGIST WITH MASSACHUSETTS ROOTS. HE FLEW INTO THE EYE OF HURRICANE MELISSA. I’VE SEEN A LOT IN MY CAREER, AND I CAN’T RECALL A TIME IN THE MODERN ERA WHEN SUCH A POWERFUL STORM WAS HEADING INTO SUCH A POPULOUS AREA. 2.8 MILLION PEOPLE ARE ON THE ISLAND OF JAMAICA RIGHT NOW, AND IT’S JUST NOT REALLY PRECEDENTED IN THE MODERN ERA. SO THAT’S THAT’S DESTROYED. FOR PEOPLE LIKE DELROY ALLEN, HE’S HOPING FOR THE BEST FROM AFAR AND PLANS TO HEAD DOWN TO THE ISLAND SOON TO HELP REBUILD. WE’RE VERY RESILIENT PEOPLE, AND WE’RE HOPING THAT ONCE THE STORM IS OVER, EVERYBODY WILL GET THEIR SPIRIT BACK AND EVERYBODY WILL BE FEELING LIKE JAMAICAN AGAIN. ALLEN SAYS THEY DO HAVE A GENERATOR AT THAT HOTEL. THEY’RE USING IT SPARINGLY. ONCE THE STORM PASSES, HE SAYS, THE COMMUNITY, AS HE DOES IN MANY OF THESE EVENTS, THEY CAN COME TO THE HOTEL, RECHARGE THEIR PHONE AND CONTACT FAMILY MEMBERS.
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Updated: 12:58 AM CDT Oct 29, 2025
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'A worst-case scenario': Category 5 Hurricane Melissa brings flooding and catastrophic winds to Jamaica
AP logo
Updated: 12:58 AM CDT Oct 29, 2025
Editorial Standards
Heavy floodwaters swept across southwestern Jamaica, winds tore roofs off buildings and boulders tumbled onto roads Tuesday as Hurricane Melissa came ashore as a catastrophic Category 5 storm, one of the strongest Atlantic hurricanes on record.Video above: Massachusetts residents worried for family stuck in Jamaica riding out stormLandslides, fallen trees and numerous power outages were reported as Melissa hit with 185 mph winds near New Hope, with officials cautioning that the cleanup and damage assessment could be slow.“There is no infrastructure in the region that can withstand a Category 5,” Prime Minister Andrew Holness said. “The question now is the speed of recovery. That’s the challenge.”Floodwaters trapped at least three families in their homes in the community of Black River in western Jamaica, and crews were unable to help them because of dangerous conditions, said Desmond McKenzie, deputy chairman of Jamaica’s Disaster Risk Management Council.“Roofs were flying off,” he said. “We are hoping and praying that the situation will ease so that some attempt can be made to get to those persons.”He noted that extensive damage was reported in the southwestern parish of St. Elizabeth, which he said “is underwater.”McKenzie stressed that it was too early to talk about the extent of the damage because the hurricane — the strongest to hit the island since recordkeeping began 174 years ago — was still pummeling the country.Rohan Brown, with Jamaica’s Meteorological Service, warned that as Melissa moves off the coast, its counterclockwise rotation would bring a heavy storm surge to northern Jamaica through the night. The storm was maintaining Category 4 strength as it moved toward Cuba, where it was expected to cross the eastern part of the island overnight.Nearly 15,000 people were in shelters in Jamaica, and some 540,000 customers, or 77%, were without power, officials said.Jamaican officials had warned against going outside during Hurricane Melissa, but curiosity got the better of a few Jamaican teens who had never experienced the wrath of a Category 5 system.“When the wind howls, it feels as if the world is falling apart,” 15-year-old Gavin Fuller said with a grin. “I wanted to know what it feels like to stand in the eye of something so powerful."Colin Bogle, a Mercy Corps adviser, said most families were sheltering in place despite the government ordering evacuations in flood-prone communities. He was sheltering with his grandmother in Portmore, where everything went dark after a loud explosion.“The noise is relentless,” he said. “People are anxious and just trying to hold on until the storm passes.”Jamaica prepares for the aftermath of a record stormOn Tuesday night, Melissa had top sustained winds of 130 mph and was moving northeast at 9 mph according to the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami. The hurricane was centered about 110 miles southwest of Guantánamo, Cuba.Its 185 mph winds and 892 millibars of central pressure tied two records for the strongest Atlantic storm at landfall. The pressure — the key measurement meteorologists use — tied 1935’s Labor Day hurricane in Florida. The wind speed tied the 1935 hurricane and 2019’s Hurricane Dorian, said hurricane scientists Phil Klotzbach of Colorado State University and Brian McNoldy of the University of Miami.“It’s been a remarkable, just a beast of a storm,” Klotzbach told The Associated Press.With a life-threatening storm surge of up to 13 feet forecast, officials were concerned about hospitals along the coast. McKenzie said four main hospitals were damaged and one of those lost power, forcing officials to evacuate 75 patients.One man called a radio station seeking urgent help for a woman in labor in western Jamaica as the hurricane neared landfall. The show's host pleaded with listeners to let him know the safest hospital before an obstetrician called in to provide detailed directions on how to deliver a baby, if necessary.In Kingston, officials warned people to watch out for crocodiles that might be displaced from their habitats by flooding.McKenzie said the government was prepared for rescues immediately after the storm passes through: “We have boats, helicopters, you name it.”The storm already was blamed for seven deaths in the Caribbean, including three in Jamaica, three in Haiti and one in the Dominican Republic, where another person remains missing.Tuesday evening, officials huddled in meetings to determine how best to clear the debris after the storm and distribute emergency relief supplies to avoid bottlenecks at Jamaica’s ports, said Richard Thompson, acting general director for Jamaica’s emergency management office.Officials hope to reopen the island’s airports by Thursday.U.N. agencies and dozens of nonprofits had food, medicine and other essential supplies positioned as they awaited a distribution rush after the storm. Melissa takes aim at CubaMelissa was expected to make landfall in eastern Cuba late Tuesday or early Wednesday. Up to 20 inches of rain was forecast in areas, along with a significant storm surge along the coast.In a televised address to the nation Tuesday, Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel urged the population to not underestimate the power of the storm, “the strongest ever to hit national territory.”In the eastern province of Santiago de Cuba, people streamed into the home of 83-year-old Eduviges Figueroa at the foot of the Sierra Maestra mountains to seek shelter after fleeing their homes by bus, truck and even horse-drawn carts.“We’re helping as best we can,” she said. “Now I’m cooking for everyone.”People in Santiago de Cuba, the island’s second-largest city with more than 1 million people, spent Tuesday frantically preparing. Few people were on the streets, while state television showed Cubans in rural areas rounding up animals and protecting crops.Diamon Mendoza, 36, did not hide her concern about the unavoidable storm.“May God have mercy on us, because it’s coming with a lot of strength,” Mendoza said. “Anything can happen.”Authorities in eastern Holguín province prepared to evacuate more than 200,000 people Tuesday and evacuated a similar number of people earlier from the town of Banes.Reports on social media and state television showed blue and white buses ferrying evacuees to shelter early Tuesday. Families clutched babies and belongings and elderly people steadied themselves with canes as they disembarked.

Heavy floodwaters swept across southwestern Jamaica, winds tore roofs off buildings and boulders tumbled onto roads Tuesday as Hurricane Melissa came ashore as a catastrophic Category 5 storm, one of the strongest Atlantic hurricanes on record.

Video above: Massachusetts residents worried for family stuck in Jamaica riding out storm

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Landslides, fallen trees and numerous power outages were reported as Melissa hit with 185 mph winds near New Hope, with officials cautioning that the cleanup and damage assessment could be slow.

“There is no infrastructure in the region that can withstand a Category 5,” Prime Minister Andrew Holness said. “The question now is the speed of recovery. That’s the challenge.”

Floodwaters trapped at least three families in their homes in the community of Black River in western Jamaica, and crews were unable to help them because of dangerous conditions, said Desmond McKenzie, deputy chairman of Jamaica’s Disaster Risk Management Council.

“Roofs were flying off,” he said. “We are hoping and praying that the situation will ease so that some attempt can be made to get to those persons.”

He noted that extensive damage was reported in the southwestern parish of St. Elizabeth, which he said “is underwater.”

McKenzie stressed that it was too early to talk about the extent of the damage because the hurricane — the strongest to hit the island since recordkeeping began 174 years ago — was still pummeling the country.

Rohan Brown, with Jamaica’s Meteorological Service, warned that as Melissa moves off the coast, its counterclockwise rotation would bring a heavy storm surge to northern Jamaica through the night.

The storm was maintaining Category 4 strength as it moved toward Cuba, where it was expected to cross the eastern part of the island overnight.

Nearly 15,000 people were in shelters in Jamaica, and some 540,000 customers, or 77%, were without power, officials said.

Jamaican officials had warned against going outside during Hurricane Melissa, but curiosity got the better of a few Jamaican teens who had never experienced the wrath of a Category 5 system.

“When the wind howls, it feels as if the world is falling apart,” 15-year-old Gavin Fuller said with a grin. “I wanted to know what it feels like to stand in the eye of something so powerful."

Colin Bogle, a Mercy Corps adviser, said most families were sheltering in place despite the government ordering evacuations in flood-prone communities. He was sheltering with his grandmother in Portmore, where everything went dark after a loud explosion.

“The noise is relentless,” he said. “People are anxious and just trying to hold on until the storm passes.”

Jamaica prepares for the aftermath of a record storm

On Tuesday night, Melissa had top sustained winds of 130 mph and was moving northeast at 9 mph according to the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami. The hurricane was centered about 110 miles southwest of Guantánamo, Cuba.

Its 185 mph winds and 892 millibars of central pressure tied two records for the strongest Atlantic storm at landfall. The pressure — the key measurement meteorologists use — tied 1935’s Labor Day hurricane in Florida. The wind speed tied the 1935 hurricane and 2019’s Hurricane Dorian, said hurricane scientists Phil Klotzbach of Colorado State University and Brian McNoldy of the University of Miami.

“It’s been a remarkable, just a beast of a storm,” Klotzbach told The Associated Press.

With a life-threatening storm surge of up to 13 feet forecast, officials were concerned about hospitals along the coast. McKenzie said four main hospitals were damaged and one of those lost power, forcing officials to evacuate 75 patients.

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One man called a radio station seeking urgent help for a woman in labor in western Jamaica as the hurricane neared landfall. The show's host pleaded with listeners to let him know the safest hospital before an obstetrician called in to provide detailed directions on how to deliver a baby, if necessary.

In Kingston, officials warned people to watch out for crocodiles that might be displaced from their habitats by flooding.

McKenzie said the government was prepared for rescues immediately after the storm passes through: “We have boats, helicopters, you name it.”

The storm already was blamed for seven deaths in the Caribbean, including three in Jamaica, three in Haiti and one in the Dominican Republic, where another person remains missing.

Tuesday evening, officials huddled in meetings to determine how best to clear the debris after the storm and distribute emergency relief supplies to avoid bottlenecks at Jamaica’s ports, said Richard Thompson, acting general director for Jamaica’s emergency management office.

Officials hope to reopen the island’s airports by Thursday.

U.N. agencies and dozens of nonprofits had food, medicine and other essential supplies positioned as they awaited a distribution rush after the storm.


Melissa takes aim at Cuba

Melissa was expected to make landfall in eastern Cuba late Tuesday or early Wednesday. Up to 20 inches of rain was forecast in areas, along with a significant storm surge along the coast.

In a televised address to the nation Tuesday, Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel urged the population to not underestimate the power of the storm, “the strongest ever to hit national territory.”

In the eastern province of Santiago de Cuba, people streamed into the home of 83-year-old Eduviges Figueroa at the foot of the Sierra Maestra mountains to seek shelter after fleeing their homes by bus, truck and even horse-drawn carts.

“We’re helping as best we can,” she said. “Now I’m cooking for everyone.”

People in Santiago de Cuba, the island’s second-largest city with more than 1 million people, spent Tuesday frantically preparing. Few people were on the streets, while state television showed Cubans in rural areas rounding up animals and protecting crops.

Diamon Mendoza, 36, did not hide her concern about the unavoidable storm.

“May God have mercy on us, because it’s coming with a lot of strength,” Mendoza said. “Anything can happen.”

Authorities in eastern Holguín province prepared to evacuate more than 200,000 people Tuesday and evacuated a similar number of people earlier from the town of Banes.

Reports on social media and state television showed blue and white buses ferrying evacuees to shelter early Tuesday. Families clutched babies and belongings and elderly people steadied themselves with canes as they disembarked.

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