Hurricane Matthew pounded western Haiti Tuesday morning, packing powerful winds and heavy rain as it crossed the country.
“The river has overflowed all around us,” church pastor Louis St. Germain said. “It’s terrible… a total disaster.”
St. Germain, who spoke to CNN on the phone from Les Cayes, Haiti, said the storm sheared a wall off of his house and tore roofs off many buildings in the area.
The “extremely dangerous” storm has already killed at least three people, caused cruise ships to change course and prompted officials to declare states of emergency.
And authorities have warned that the death toll could climb.
“We’ve already seen deaths. People who were out at sea. There are people who are missing. They are people who didn’t respect the alerts. They’ve lost their lives,” Interim Haitian President Jocelerme Privert said at a news conference.
The Category 4 hurricane made landfall near Les Anglais, Haiti, around 7 a.m. ET, according to the National Hurricane Center. By 2 p.m., the center of the storm was back at sea, churning north toward Cuba.
Forecasters say the storm, which is located about 65 miles east-southeast of Guantanamo, Cuba, and moving at about 10 mph, is expected to hit eastern Cuba Tuesday afternoon.
A threat remains in Haiti even though the eye of the storm has passed. Ferocious rain and wind were already thrashing the Caribbean nation before the storm made landfall. And forecasters said Tuesday that life-threatening flash floods and mudslides were likely.
Up to 40 inches of rain could be dumped on the impoverished nation, which is still recovering from a devastating earthquake that struck six years ago and a cholera outbreak after that.
River levels rise
Les Cayes Mayor Jean Gabriel Fortuné said Tuesday morning the storm was slamming into his city. He posted videos on social media that showed wind whipping through trees as heavy rains pelted people on the streets.
The United Nations mission in Haiti shared a photo of people wading through water in a flooded street there.
Eyewitnesses also reported streets flooding in the capital of Port-au-Prince.
In one neighborhood, a river swelled to dangerous levels, Junior Jules told CNN’s iReport. A video Jules sent to CNN showed rain-soaked residents wandering around the Crois-des-Missions bridge as rising waters rushed underneath.
“It is really, really, really bad. The water is almost over the bridge,” he said. “It’s the biggest bridge we’ve got.”
As Matthew drenched Haiti with dozens of inches of rain, Cuba, the Bahamas and the United States took steps to prepare for the storm’s arrival in the coming days.
Forecasters predict the storm will move over the southeastern and central Bahamas Tuesday evening and approach the northwestern Bahamas Wednesday evening.
Death toll rising
Three people have died in incidents connected to Hurricane Matthew within the past week, authorities said.
In Haiti, Guillaume Albert Moleon, an Interior Ministry spokesman, said one fisherman died on Sunday. A second fisherman is presumed dead, but no body has been recovered.
In St. Vincent and the Grenadines, a teenage boy died in a landslide as he was cleaning a drain behind his house, according to Michelle Forbes, deputy director for the National Emergency Management Office. The boy died Wednesday after storms from Matthew passed.
The hurricane could cause further devastation for Haiti as much of the country’s infrastructure remains weak after the 2010 earthquake that killed more than 200,000 people.
The Haitian government, which urged people to find shelters, has identified about 1,000 facilities as temporary safe havens. More than 300,000 people are in shelters across the country, the United Nations said.
More than 9,000 people have been evacuated from homes across Haiti, Civil Protection spokesman Joseph Edgard Celestin said.
After the storm clears Haiti, residents could face risks from another threat: standing water.
“That means a potential spike in cholera cases,” said John Hasse, the humanitarian aid agency World Vision’s national director in Haiti. “Other mosquito-borne diseases that have been more or less controlled are going to rear their heads.”
Haiti is still recovering from a post-quake cholera outbreak that killed 10,000 people.
Collision course for Cuba
Forecasters said Matthew could dump up to 20 inches of rain in Cuba.
The United States, taking no chances, began to airlift 700 family members of military personnel stationed at Guantanamo Bay to Florida. The 61 detainees held by the United States as alleged enemy combatants will not be evacuated, officials added.
After skirting Cuba, Matthew is expected to hit the Bahamas and turn toward the United States. It should lose some strength, but still have 120 mph winds.