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Powerful Hurricane Paloma Strikes Storm-Weary Cuba

Powerful Hurricane Paloma slams into storm-weary Cuba as thousands evacuate coast

Waves caused by the arrival of Hurricane Paloma crash over a dock in Spots Bay in George Town along... Expand
(AP)

Powerful Hurricane Paloma slammed into southern Cuba on Saturday as authorities scrambled to protect crops and move hundreds of thousands of people to safer ground on an island still reeling from two other devastating storms.

Paloma made landfall near Santa Cruz del Sur as an extremely dangerous Category 4 storm, but quickly weakened into a still-ferocious Category 3 with winds of 115 mph (185 kph) and torrential rains, the National Hurricane Center in Miami said.

It was expected to steadily lose strength as it moved across the island before hitting the central Bahamas by Sunday night or Monday.

Early reports of damage in Cuba were limited, but state television said the late-season storm toppled a major communications tower on the southern coast and interrupted electricity and phone service.

In the central-eastern province of Camaguey, more than 220,000 people were evacuated from low-lying areas. Another 170,000 people were moved in the eastern province of Las Tunas.

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Former President Fidel Castro warned in an essay published by Cuban state media Saturday that Paloma would damage roads and crops planted after hurricanes Gustav and Ike hit in late August and early September, causing about $9.4 billion in damage and destroying nearly a third of the island's crops.

In the city of Camaguey, 79-year-old Rosa Perez waited out the storm at a government shelter with her 83-year-old husband and about 900 others from the town of Santa Cruz del Sur.

Perez was a toddler when she watched her mother, older sister and about 40 other relatives swept away in a storm surge during a 1932 hurricane that killed about 3,000 people.

"We're just waiting to see what happens to our home and our beach," she said.

Fellow Santa Cruz del Sur resident Aida Perez, who is not related, watched the news with her daughters, ages 19 and 10.

"This is a really hard blow," the 44-year-old said, adding she was certain they would lose their home and everything in it. "What's important is that we are alive."

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