Skip navigation

Wilma batters dilapidated Havana homes

‘Recovering from this, given our economic situation, is going to be tough’

IMAGE: FLOODED HAVANA STREET
Adalberto Roque / AFP-Getty Images
This street in Havana, Cuba, was one of many flooded Monday as Hurricane Wilma pounded the seaside city.
Slide show
CASSIDY
  Pummeled
Wilma’s waves and winds hit Cuba and Florida as Mexico mops up.
Slide show
Local workers cross a flooded area of Ca
  Wilma bears down
Hurricane Wilma hits Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula, while Florida prepares for the storm's next move.
Video: Hurricanes|  
  MORE
Nightly News
Is New Orleans ready for election?
March 18: The New Orleans mayoral race is one month away. With 20 candidates and thousands of voters spread out across the United States, many are wondering if their votes will count. NBC's Chip Reid reports.

Interactive
Follow the progress of past and present hurricanes
  Photo features  
  More
Image: Girls stand in the mouth of a cat sculpture in central Kiev
Reuters
  The Week in Pictures
A starry night, cat’s mouth, a lighthouse stands tall, bear attack, a sea of balloons, H1N1 reaction and more news and feature photos from around the globe.
Image: A volunteer dressed as a cavewoman walks inside a cage at Warsaw Zoo
Reuters
PhotoBlog
View and discuss the pictures and issues that caught our eyes.
Text alerts on msnbc.com

Breaking news alerts (about 1 per day)
Click here to sign up or text NEWS to MSNBC (67622).

Find more alerts at alerts.msnbc.com

updated 9:50 a.m. ET Oct. 25, 2005

HAVANA - Hurricane Wilma never made landfall in Cuba, but its ferocious waves transformed the island’s capital city for a day, ripping off chunks of the famous Malecon seawall and flooding many of Havana’s most prominent streets.

Picturesque but dilapidated buildings lining the northern coastal highway alongside the Malecon received an especially severe beating on Monday. Their doors and wooden window shutters were flung off as first-floor homes filled with waist-deep water.

“This has been terrible, a true catastrophe,” said Aurora Quintana, 38, who lives on the second floor of a building facing the ocean. “These houses are already in really bad shape. Recovering from this, given our economic situation, is going to be tough.”

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

Cuba’s communist government sent amphibious vehicles and rescue squads to evacuate nearly 250 residents from homes throughout the city.

“It’s been really sad, and unpleasant,” said Ernesto Suarez, a civil defense official. “(The flooding) happened in such little time. Once the water started coming in, it really came in quickly.”

Water at the foreign ministry
Cars, including some old American Chevrolets, were almost completely submerged, and only the bright blue tops of public phone booths peeked out from the churning, brown waters. Waves lapped at the front door of the seaside Foreign Ministry building as young men in wooden boats rowed nearby.

There were no immediate reports of deaths or major injuries. Nearly 700,000 people were evacuated across Cuba’s west in recent days as Wilma approached.

Although the Malecon, which curves for several miles throughout the capital, and adjacent neighborhoods often flood during storms, the extent of Monday’s flooding was highly unusual and reportedly occurs only when hurricanes pass along Cuba’s northern coast.

The waters were expected to begin slowly receding throughout Tuesday.

As night fell Monday, residents on the Malecon nailed doors back down on their homes, praying the ocean would calm down as they braced for a night without electricity and water.

“No one has come here yet to check up on us, to see how we fared,” said Ignacio Duro, 36. “My faith goes as far as what I can get done myself.”

One civil defense volunteer in a different part of town said Duro’s neighborhood was still too dangerous, as the ocean continued its aggressive assault over the seawall.

Second-floor safety
But those with second-floor apartments invited their downstairs neighbors to wait out the night with them. About 20 people, many of them children, filled Quintana’s modest home, where she prepared a meal of rice and meat and shared the clean water she’d saved before the storm.

“I have plenty of beds, so at least the kids can get a good night’s sleep,” she said. “It’s nothing, really — these people have lost everything.”

Wilma also spun off several tornadoes over the weekend in Cuba that left six injured and destroyed more than 20 homes and tobacco curing houses in the country’s western tobacco-growing region.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Sponsored LinksGet listed here
Online College Courses
Boost your career with an online Degree. Pick from Leading Colleges!
www.EarnMyDegree.com

Sponsored links

Resource guide