Remembering Hurricane Ivan 15 years later
On that fateful weekend, between September 10 and 11, 2004, Hurricane Ivan brushed just south of the island – lashing Jamaica with torrential rains, landslides and widespread destruction.
Ivan, a Category 4 storm when it passed 30 kilometres
south of Clarendon, resulted in 17 deaths, and caused damage across the island,
with southern parishes suffering the greatest toll to infrastructure.
Ivan, officially the ninth-costliest
Atlantic hurricane, racked up an eye-watering bill of around US$26.1 billion in
damage across the Caribbean, Venezuela, sections of the US and Mexico.
Throughout Jamaica, Hurricane Ivan left US$575
million in damage.
Hurricane-force winds buffeted the entire
island, while heavy rainfall triggered widespread mudslides and flooding. More
than 5,600 houses were destroyed by the storm, with another 41,400 suffering
varying degrees of damage. Extensive
sections of Jamaica’s major utility networks were damaged.
Overall, Hurricane Ivan left 18,000 people homeless as a result of the floodwaters and high winds.
The powerful system, the fourth major
hurricane in the active 2004 season, was described as one of the most devastating
in Jamaica’s recorded history, with about 500,000 Jamaicans being told to
evacuate from coastal areas.
Then-Prime Minister P.J. Patterson declared a public emergency, saying that the nation had to “prepare for the worst-case scenario”.
In the aftermath of the storm, looters reportedly roamed the streets of Kingston robbing emergency responders at gunpoint.
No one will be hearing the ‘Ivan’ being attached to any other storm, as the name was retired due to the scope of its impact across the Caribbean, and Mexico as well parts of North and South America.
BUZZ fam, where were you when Hurricane Ivan passed by Jamaica? Did your
home suffer any damage during the storm?
Where does Hurricane Ivan rank for you, was
it the worst storm you’ve experienced?
Sound off in the comments section below!