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Effects of Hurricane Matthew in Haiti

Effects of Hurricane Matthew in Haiti

Photo: MODIS image captured by NASA’s Terra satellite · Commons · Public domain · Cropped & Resized

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Hurricane Matthew struck southwestern Haiti near Les Anglais on October 4, 2016, leaving widespread damage in the impoverished nation. Matthew was a late-season Category 5 hurricane on the Saffir–Simpson scale, having formed in the southeastern Caribbean on September 28. The hurricane weakened to Category 4 before making landfall near Les Anglais on October 4, at which time the National Hurricane Center estimated maximum sustained winds of 240 km/h (150 mph). This made it the strongest storm to hit the nation since Hurricane Cleo in 1964, and the third strongest Haitian landfall on record. Hurricane-force winds – 119 km/h (74 mph) or greater – affected about 1.125 million people in the country. The Haitian government assessed the death toll at 674, although other sources reported more than three times that figure.

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Image: MODIS image captured by NASA’s Terra satellite, Public domain · Text from Wikipedia, CC BY-SA 4.0