Devastated cities, millions of people without electricity but above all a human toll that could be "substantial": Florida was just beginning Thursday, September 29 to take the measure of the considerable damage caused by Hurricane Ian.

Downgraded to a tropical storm after passing over land, Ian strengthened again to the point of being recategorized as a hurricane by the National Hurricane Center (NHC).

Ian was heading late Thursday afternoon to North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia in the southern United States.

While the images of streets transformed into channels of murky water multiplied, of boats thrown to the ground like simple toys, of shattered houses, the latest balance sheet in Florida reported at least eight dead.

“This could be the deadliest hurricane in Florida history,” US President Joe Biden said during a visit to the offices of the federal agency that fights against natural disasters, Fema.

"The figures (...) are not yet clear but we are receiving initial reports of human losses which could be substantial," he added, saying he wanted to go to the southern state as soon as possible. , but also on the American territory of Puerto Rico, an island recently damaged by Hurricane Fiona.

night of anguish

An official in Charlotte County, West Florida, confirmed to CNN the death of six people, without giving further details.

A spokesperson for Volusia County, on the east coast, announced that it had recorded "the first death linked to Hurricane Ian", a 72-year-old man, "out to empty his swimming pool during the storm".

An official in Osceola County, in the east-central part of the state, told CNN of the death of a resident of a nursing home.

On the road to Hurricane #Ian in #Florida



Among the cities hardest hit by the hurricane is #FortMyers.

Widespread power cuts, uprooted trees and distraught residents... The story of our team on site ⤵️



📺 @loicdelamornais @TotoFil pic.twitter.com/PWAvVaiqh7

— France TV Washington (@F2Washington) September 29, 2022

At the same time, the search continued to find 18 passengers of a migrant boat which capsized on Wednesday near the archipelago of the Keys, nine others having been rescued.

After a night of anguish, the inhabitants began the inventory of fixtures Thursday.

In the village of Iona, Ronnie Sutton, who has still not been able to return home, said he was convinced that the water had destroyed everything.

"It's terrible. I guess it's the price to pay when you live at sea level. Sometimes it backfires on you," he lamented.

In Fort Myers, flooding swamped some boats, pushing others into downtown streets.

"It was terrifying noises, with debris flying everywhere, doors in the air," said resident Tom Johnson who witnessed the destruction.

🇺🇸 [ FLORIDA ] #HurricaneIan



The coastal town of Fort Myers Beach woke up this Thursday devastated by the passage of Hurricane #Ian and its powerful storm surge!



(📹 via Max Huber) 🌀pic.twitter.com/pB3X8WsD47

— Alexandre (@alex_le_bars) September 29, 2022

“We have never seen floods like this,” said Republican Florida Governor Ron DeSantis.

“Some of these areas, Cape Coral, the city of Fort Myers, were really flooded and really devastated by this storm,” he continued, calling the damage “historic.”

Without electricity

Ian made landfall Wednesday afternoon as a Category 4 hurricane (on a scale of 5) in southwest Florida, before continuing to track across the state, bringing high winds and rain. torrential.

Thursday afternoon, more than 2.6 million homes or businesses remained without electricity, out of a total of 11 million, according to the specialized site PowerOutage.

Punta Gorda, a small coastal town located in the path of the hurricane, woke up without power.

Ian uprooted some trees and knocked down utility poles and street signs.

Its rains flooded the streets of the marina, where the water still reached the calves Thursday morning.

Faced with the extent of the damage, Joe Biden had declared a state of major natural disaster on Thursday morning, a decision making it possible to release additional federal funds for the affected regions.

As the surface of the oceans warms, the frequency of the most intense hurricanes, with stronger winds and greater precipitation, increases, but not the total number of hurricanes.

With AFP

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