At least three dead after Hurricane Irma makes second landfall in Florida
Nearly three million people in the US state do not electricity, though the storm has weakened from Category 4 to Category 2.
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At least three people were reported dead as Hurricane Irma made second landfall in Florida in the United States on Sunday. It will head towards the west coast of the state peninsula on Monday, The Washington Post reported, quoting the National Hurricane Center in Miami.
The storm made first landfall in Cudjoe Key at the Florida coast around 9 am on Sunday. It made the second landfall at 3.35 pm at Marco Island.
At least three million people in the state are without electricity, though the storm has weakened from Category 4 to Category 2, Sky News reported. However, winds continue to hit the region at 100 mph.
Florida Senator Marco Rubio said Miami’s Hialeah Hospital has only two hours of diesel left in its generator.
Stormy night outside the #NWS office in Ruskin, FL courtesy of Hurricane #IRMA. #flwx pic.twitter.com/tJe9rPSMOa
— NWS Tampa Bay (@NWSTampaBay) September 11, 2017
Just got report @HialeahHospital has less than 2 hours of diesel left to run generator. They need diesel or @insideFPL restoration ASAP
— Marco Rubio (@marcorubio) September 11, 2017
Eye of Irma moving over Lee County now. Highest wind gusts measured so far at Southwest Florida International Airport of 89mph. #Irma #flwx pic.twitter.com/lFqCHaBySv
— NWS Tampa Bay (@NWSTampaBay) September 10, 2017
Irma is a ‘big monster’: Donald Trump
United States President Donald Trump on Sunday said Irma was “some big monster”, reported ABC News.
“We tried to warn everybody, and for the most part they have left, but that is a bad path to be in,” he said, referring to the people who ignored orders to evacuate and stayed back along the coast. “The Coast Guard has been amazing with what they are doing right in the middle of the storms. The Federal Emergency Management Agency has been incredible, and we are working very well with the governor and other governors in the surrounding states.”
Trump said the damages from Irma will cost a lot of money, “but right now we are worried about lives, not costs.”
Continue to notify us of US citizens overseas impacted by #HurricaneIrma & #HurricaneJose. https://t.co/EuIpTB144z pic.twitter.com/7qnsRKclte
— Travel - State Dept (@TravelGov) September 10, 2017
Irma devastates Caribbean
The storm made landfall in Florida after leaving a trail of destructing in a number of islands in the Caribbean, where it killed at least 22 people. Irma barreled through Cuba, Puerto Rico, St Martin and the British and US Virgin Islands.
It has caused damage worth more than $10 billion, the BBC reported. About 50% of the population of Barbuda is now homeless, Prime Minister Gaston Browne said.