Ike, Now Category 2, Churns Over Cuba
Misery In Haiti Escalates in Wake of Hurricane; 1 Million Cubans Relocated As Island Faces Storm's Fury
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Play CBS Video Video Florida Braces For Ike Hurricane Ike is thundering toward Florida and in preparation, officials ordered a mandatory evacuation of the Florida Keys. Priya David reports
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Video Ike, Hannah Head For U.S. Residents along the East Coast are preparing for the worst, as Tropical Storm Hannah and Hurricane Ike will soon hit the U.S. But, as Priya David reports, not everyone has heeded the storm warnings.
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Video East Coast Braces For Storms Tropical Storm Hanna is on its way to the U.S. after causing serious damage and death in Haiti. Hurricane Ike is not far behind. Priya David reports on preparation efforts in the Carolinas.
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Residents stand on the second floor of a house damaged by Hurricane Ike in Cabaret, Haiti, Sept. 7, 2008. (AP Photo/Nicolas Garcia)
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A vehicle sits under rubble during heavy rains produced by Hurricane Ike in Camaguey, Cuba Monday, Sept. 8, 2008. (AP Photo/Javier Galeano)
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A man walks through a street under heavy rains produced by Hurricane Ike in Camaguey, Monday, Sept. 8, 2008. Ike roared across Cuba on Monday, causing the evacuation of some 900,000 Cubans from its path. (AP Photo/Javier Galeano)
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Photo Essay Inundated By Ike Storm churned across Cuba after causing more deadly floods in Haiti. Texas landfall likely.
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Interactive Storm Season Track the latest storms, see how they form, get preparation tips and more.
Ike roared onto the island on Sunday after destroying houses and crops on low-lying islands, and worsening floods in Haiti that have already killed more than 300 people.
With Ike forecast to sweep the length of Cuba and possibly hit Havana head-on, CBS News producer Portia Siegelbaum reported that at least 1 million Cubans had been evacuated to shelters or higher ground.
"We are preparing for a strong hit," Cuban Vice President Carlos Lage told state television.
To the north, residents of the Florida Keys fled up a narrow highway, fearful that the "extremely dangerous" hurricane could hit them Tuesday. A tropical storm warning is now posted in the Florida Keys.
As of 11:00 a.m. EDT, Ike's sustained winds decreased slightly to near 100 miles per hour with higher gusts. The storm is centered about 290 miles east-southeast of Havana, and is moving to the west near 14 mph.
At least 58 people died as Ike's winds and rain swept Haiti Sunday - and officials found three more bodies from a previous storm - raising the nation's death toll from four tropical storms in less than a month to 319. It was too early to know of deaths on other islands where the most powerful winds were still blowing.
Ike's center hit the Bahamas' Great Inagua island, where the roofs of its two shelters both sprung leaks under the 135 mph winds. As the storm passed, people inside peeked through windows at toppled trees and houses stripped of their roofs.
"It's nasty. I can't remember getting hit like this," reserve police officer Henry Nixon said from inside a shelter holding about 85 people.
Todd Kimberlain, a meteorologist at the U.S. National Hurricane Center, said Ike reached land in eastern Cuba late Sunday night and was expected to remain over the island until Tuesday.
Siegelbaum reported late Sunday that official estimates put the number of homes destroyed in Guantanamo province at 80. "After watching footage from there, it's clear that many, many more will be leveled or severely damaged," she said.
The hurricane center predicted Ike's eye could hit Havana, the capital of 2 million people with many vulnerable old buildings, by Monday night.
State television broadcast images of the first damage in Cuba, showing a storm surge washing over coastal homes in the easternmost city of Bayamo. It reported that dozens of dwellings were damaged beyond repair.

"These storms have a mind of their own," Florida Gov. Charlie Crist said as tourists and then residents evacuated the Keys along a narrow highway.
In Louisiana, Gov. Bobby Jindal and New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin prepared for the possibility of more havoc only days after an historic, life-saving evacuation of more than 2 million people from Hurricane Gustav.
Muddy Bodies Unclaimed In Haiti
Hurricane Ike's torrential rains swelled rivers across Haiti and sent floodwaters gushing into homes in the dead of night in one eastern town, killing at least 58 people.
Flooding also collapsed a bridge that had been the last land route to the food-short northern city of Gonaives, where residents fled to rooftops as waters rose for the second time in a week. Three bodies were found in Gonaives on Sunday, all victims of previous storms.
In all, four storms in less than a month have killed at least 319 people in the Western Hemisphere's poorest country.
But the rain stopped and floodwaters began to recede Monday morning in Gonaives, and residents who had taken refuge in the mountains began walking back to their mud-filled homes.
"People are starting to move back because they have nowhere to go," said Eric Mouillefarine, an official with the U.N. Development Program. "They want to protect their homes from looters."
Most of Sunday's deaths came in the Cabaret region, north of Port-au-Prince. A swollen river unleashed mudslides and floods, crushing homes and sending people fleeing in the middle of the night.
In the Always Funeral Home, 21 muddy bodies were piled in a dank room, unclaimed. Two of them were pregnant, one still clutching a small girl to her chest. Morgue workers roughly separated the bodies to count them.
On Monday, local civil defense director Henri Louis Praviel said authorities were searching for 16 more people, mostly children reported missing by their parents.
Waters reached chest-high levels before receding Sunday morning, leaving people to shovel mud from their houses. Others sat outside, surrounded by salvaged pots and mattresses, staring glumly at their collapsed homes.
"We took refuge in one room and waited there all night and prayed," said Sister Marie Denise, who was trapped by waist-high waters in the house she shares with four nuns. They evacuated to the nearby school they run after the waters receded.
"We don't know if one of our girls is among the dead," she said of her students.
No foreign aid has reached the town, Praviel said. Still, with the waters swiftly retreating and all roads leading into Cabaret still open, the town may be in better shape than isolated Gonaives, Haiti's fourth-largest city.
Pummeled by rains for four days last week during Tropical Storm Hanna, the city was cut off again Sunday when flooding caused the collapse of the Mirebalais bridge in central Haiti.
The falling water levels and returning refugees were hopeful signs, and U.N. peacekeepers and aid groups said they would overcome logistical difficulties and blocked roads to help the stranded city.
But water was still likely to keep running down from deforested mountains into the coastal flood plain.

Desperation was increasingly evident among people who have had little to eat or drink for days, prompting peacekeepers to beef up security.
A line of 3,000 people snaked around a warehouse-turned-U.N. shelter, and several hundred pushed and shoved to break down the door, only to be quickly subdued by Bolivian troops in riot gear.
As peacekeepers delivered aid to areas their trucks could reach, scores of young men splashed alongside, begging for help. One called out with a bullhorn: "Hey, hey, my friend. Give me some water!"
Food and fuel prices both skyrocketed, with gasoline reaching 500 Haitian gourdes (US$13) a gallon. And while relief workers in Gonaives said they had enough emergency food supplies for the next couple of days, distributing it is becoming ever more complicated.
Workers spent four hours handing out water and high-protein biscuits. But people were growing tired of relief food and started to demand rice, which has gone up 60 percent in price since the storms.
"We would like to eat some real food," said shelter resident Esaie St. Juste. "Rice, beans, sardines. Haitian people like real food."
Above Haiti's coastal floodplain, in the Artibonite Valley, authorities opened an overflowing dam, despite fears it could inundate more homes and possibly damage Haiti's "rice bowl," a farming area whose revival is key to rescuing the starving country.
Officials did not have immediate word on the situation below the dam, but Agriculture Minister Joanas Gay used state-run Radio Nacionale to urge Artibonite residents to "evacuate as soon as you can."
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Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





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See all 25 CommentsIf they asked God what he thinks about that, and listened to his answer, they''d have to start believing in helping poor countries to reforest, and they''d stop driving SUV''s to do their bit to slow down climate change. They''d have to stop treating Cubans like they don''t exist. But they are too busy blaming God to listen to what he is telling them.
Posted by sly_64
You can research these things. That''s the beauty about science. Findings can be tested by anybody. And if a test fails, the theory is discarded or another hypothesis is created for further testing.
However, deeply religious people will ignore those findings because it conflicts with their personal beliefs. For instance, some people still believe the earth is only 6000 years old, due to their beliefs. These beliefs can''t be tested because they are derived from myths, not actual testable observations.
Posted by sly_64
Because people strongly believe god controls the weather. It''s the easy way to explain things. If something happens, whether good or bad, god did it...end of discussion...no need for further observation. I find it a very primitive way of analyzing events, but yet it''s common.
Posted by yourpointis
How will blessing people in harm''s way help them? Has it helped the people whose lives were destroyed in the past? Or is your god selective and only destroys lives of people who aren''t blessed?
After turning southern Cuba into hamburger, Ike has just exited the southwest coast and is heading into the Caribbean. Maximum sustained winds are around 100 mph and central pressure is about 28.35 inches.
The projected track has him hugging Cuba''s southern coast, crossing land again at the western capes and entering the Gulf of Mexico near Havana around 10 PM Tuesday. If he does that then this opens up the likelihood of further weakening before he can use all that warm gulf water as an intensifying source.
Problem is, this "projected" track sags further south every time there is an update. It is not unreasonable to expect this trend to continue. If it does, then Ike will get pushed further south into warmer waters much sooner. If he does go there and either misses the western cape completely or just graze it, then there is a risk he could reintensify all the way up to Cat 4. Gustav didn''t do that only because crossing Cuba dealt him a crippling blow - and he still gave N.O. a lot of grief.
If Ike shifts south, misses Cuba and sneaks into the Gulf through the Yucatan Channel, then things could get really ugly really fast.
Posted by jng123
jng123, well said. My feeling is mutual.
'' .. if journalists and musicians were less dressed and diligent and more garden cut and paste, then they would be more easy to mimic .. if soldiers and congresses were more dressed and diligent and less garden cut and paste, then they would be less easy to mimic .. ''
'' .. in the time it takes to educate one class of build - its, the armys educate hundreds and thousands of classes of destroy - its .. ''
Then I guess you think you are God since only you can be correct.
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Posted by gophockeymom at 10:26 AM : Sep 08, 2008
well, if you believe in god, and believe that he/she can do whatever they want, then why do you not believe that they could make a hurricane hit your house directly for being a pompous a**?
Most of the citizens of Cuba are innocent people who''ve had Communism forced upon them, so your remarks say more about the evil in you than about them.
You''re a sick and pathetic human being! I don''t know what kind of God you believe in but mine loves all mankind and is not vengeful and petty like you. To quote Joyve Meyer''s words this morning, if God was vengeful none of us would be here!
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