Far to the north, the first evacuations were ordered in the US as coastal residents prepared to escape the approaching monster storm, expected off the East Coast later this week.
In Haiti, severe flooding and devastating winds caused untold damage to the Americas' poorest nation, where officials were still struggling to communicate with the country's hard-hit south, where telecommunications had been disrupted.
The collapse of a bridge cut off the only road linking Port-au-Prince to the peninsula that makes up southern Haiti, making matters worse.
A partial assessment of the damage in Haiti, which excluded the department of Grande Anse, which was in the direct eye of the storm, indicated that 14,500 people had been displaced and 1,855 homes flooded. Those numbers were expected to increase dramatically once communication is reestablished with the area.
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One person has been reported missing and around 10 injured so far in Haiti, officials said.
Next in line, Cuba was hit late yesterday afternoon on its eastern tip.
Americans meanwhile girded for a taste of nature's fury.
Florida and South Carolina as well as parts of North Carolina and Georgia have declared states of emergency. South Carolina said it would start evacuating 1.1 million people from its coast today and try to get them at least 160 kilometres inland.
"It's not going to be a fast evacuation. It could take up to several hours," South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley said. "If you can leave early, do that."
It marked the first time in 52 years that a Category Four storm made landfall in Haiti.
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