Turks and Caicos Islands brace for Hurricane Fiona after it slams Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic

Category 2 storm to become Category 3 event and is on course to become first “major hurricane” of 2022 season

Puerto Rico has been left devastated after Hurricane Fiona brought heavy wind and rain to the island.

Residents were ordered to take shelter on the Turks and Caicos Islands on Tuesday as an increasingly powerful Hurricane Fiona churned towards the Caribbean archipelago, leaving death and destruction in Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic.

The strengthening category 2 storm to become a Category 3 event by Tuesday afternoon with winds exceeding 178km/h (111m/h), was on track to pass close to the eastern end of the Turks and Caicos Islands on Tuesday evening, before heading for the southern Bahamas.

Having caused a power blackout, flooding and killing at least two in Puerto Rico, followed by torrential rain and powerful winds in the Dominican Republic, Fiona gained power as it churned northwards across the warm Caribbean waters on Monday. It was on course to become the first “major hurricane” of the 2022 season if it becomes a Category 3 storm, according to the National Hurricane Center (NHC).

On the Turks and Caicos Islands, a British Overseas Territory with 40 low-lying coral islands and a population of about 40,000 that sits about 1,126km (700 miles) southeast of Florida, the government’s National Emergency Operations Center (NEOC) residents of three eastern islands to shelter in place, and ordered businesses to close.

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Flooded fields near La Plata river after the passing of Hurricane Fiona in Cayey, Puerto Rico. Photograph: Erika P Rodriguez/The New York Times
Flooded fields near La Plata river after the passing of Hurricane Fiona in Cayey, Puerto Rico. Photograph: Erika P Rodriguez/The New York Times

“All persons are to remain indoors at their residence, place of safety or where they seek shelter until the NEOC issues an ‘all-clear’ message,” the agency residents of Grand Turk, South Caicos and Salt Cay. Residents were stocking up on food and water while shelters were being prepared. Foreign governments issued travel alerts for the islands, a popular tourist destination.

Similar preparations were under way in the eastern Bahamas. Fiona is on track to hit the eastern Bahamas on Wednesday, when it could have reached Category 4 strength.

In Puerto Rico, a territory of the United States, residents were still facing strong winds, frequent lightning and heavy rain on Monday.

Fiona made landfall in Puerto Rico on Sunday afternoon, dumping up to 76.2cm (30 inches) of rain in some areas, with at least two people killed.

The storm comes five years after Puerto Rico was ravaged by Hurricane Maria, which triggered the worst power blackout in US history and killed 3,000.

US president Joe Biden spoke with Puerto Rico governor Pedro Pierluisi on Monday, promising to increase the support personnel sent to the island over the next few days.

Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) Administrator Deanne Criswell will travel there on Tuesday.

Nearly 90 per cent of Puerto Rico remained without power on Monday, according to Poweroutage.us. Officials said it would take days to reconnect the whole island of 3.3 million people.

Heavy rain and high winds cause havoc across the Dominican RepublicOpens in new window ]

Puerto Rico's power grid is fragile despite emergency repairs after Maria, according to Center for a New Economy, a Puerto Rican think tank.

Maria, a Category 5 storm in 2017, left 1.5 million customers without electricity and knocked out 80 per cent of power lines. Thousands of Puerto Ricans still live under makeshift tarpaulin roofs.

Fiona made landfall in the Dominican Republic near Boca Yuma at 8:30am (3.30am local time) on Monday, according to the NHC. The centre of the storm reached the northern coast of Hispaniola before noon.

It is the first hurricane to score a direct hit on the Dominican Republic since Jeanne left severe damage in the east of the country in 2004. — Reuters