Hurricane Melissa made landfall in Cuba less than a day after it became the strongest recorded storm to strike Jamaica, where it left hundreds of thousands without power and forced hospitals to evacuate.
Melissa crossed the coast in eastern Cuba as an “extremely dangerous” storm, the US National Hurricane Center said in a statement at about 3:10 a.m. Eastern
Time on Wednesday. As much as 25 inches (63 centimeters) of rain and storm surges up to 12 feet (3.7 meters) above normal are expected.
Cuban officials were evacuating around 735,000 people ahead of the storm’s arrival on Wednesday morning, media reported. President Miguel Díaz-Canel Bermúdez
called on citizens to “be alert, show discipline and not forget discipline i
n the face of this threat,” according to state newspaper Granma. More than 3,600 people also took emergency shelter in Haiti.
The storm is now a Category 3 on the five-step Saffir-Simpson s
cale with winds of about 120 miles (195 kilometers) per hour, the NHC said. It’s forecast to remain a powerful hurricane as it passes over Cuba and moves toward the Bahamas on Wednesday.
Melissa slammed into Jamaica with sustained winds of 185 miles per hour on Tuesday afternoon— makin
g it a rare Category 5 hurricane at landfall and potentially the most destructive of the 2025 season. It struck near New Hope on Jamaica’s southern coast, about 25 miles south of Montego Bay, according to the NHC.
The situation in Jamaica remained too chaotic to provide a full, official assessment, according to Minister of Local G
overnment Desmond McKenzie, who has been leading the emergency response. He said the damage has been widespread.
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“This is one of the worst experiences that we have ever encountered,” McKenzie said in a televised stat
ement on Tuesday. More than 500,000 citizens were left without power, while 15,000 were in shelters and three hospitals were severely damaged, he added.
President Donald Trump, who was traveling in Asia, told reporters that the US was monitoring the damage and “prepared to move” humanitarian assistance to Jamaica.
“It’s doing tremendous damage as we speak,” Trump said, adding that the storm was “knocking down everything in front of it.”
About 2,500 feet above sea level, Melissa’s winds clocked in at 215 miles per hour, according to measurements collected by hurricane hunter aircraft before la
ndfall in Jamaica. In addition to the winds, the storm has brought days of flooding rain, putting residents and an estimated 25,000 tourists on the island at risk.
The hurricane is expected to result in property damages costing between $5 billion and $10 billion in Jamaica,
according to an estimate by Cotality, a property intelligence company.
Households and small businesses are more vulnerable than hotels, and gaps in insurance coverage could r
esult in “severe financial and social disruption,” according to Firas Saleh, director of insurance solutions for Moody’s.
Local media reported that Melissa hammered St. Elizabeth Parish, along the island’s southwestern coast. Images shared by the Jamaica Observer showed roofs being ripped off buildings and streets covere
d in raging floodwater. In the capital Kingston, there were reports of sporadic flooding and wind gusts tearing down billboards.


































