Hurricane Matthew has already killed 113 people and threatens to flatten homes from Florida to the Carolinas.
“This is about as bad as it gets,” National Hurricane Center Director Rick Knabb said.
So how bad is Matthew? Here’s a look by the numbers:
145 mph: Expected strength upon landfall
By the time Matthew makes landfall in the US — possibly early Friday on Florida’s east coast — it’ll likely be a Category 4 hurricane, blasting 145-mph winds, forecasters said.
2 million: Number of people urged to evacuate
The mandatory evacuations are the largest since Hurricane Sandy, which pummeled the US East Coast in 2012 and killed at least 147 people in North America.
About 1.5 million Floridians are in the evacuation zone. South Carolina has ordered hundreds of thousands to leave the coastal areas.
Even the 14,000 residents of the oldest city in the US — St. Augustine, Florida — have been told to evacuate.
113: Deaths caused by Matthew
Hurricane Matthew is the worst humanitarian disaster to strike Haiti since the 2010 earthquake, which killed more than 200,000 people, a United Nations representative in Haiti said.
Matthew killed at least 108 people in Haiti, where tens of thousands still live in makeshift homes after the earthquake.
Adding to the humanitarian crisis: National Route 2, which connects Port-au-Prince with Haiti’s devastated southern peninsula, broke apart when a bridge collapsed — severely hampering relief efforts.
Matthew also killed four people in the Dominican Republic and a teenage boy in St. Vincent and the Grenadines.
11 million: Floridians under hurricane warning
At least 11 million Florida residents were under a hurricane warning Wednesday.
“If you need to evacuate and you haven’t, evacuate. This storm will kill you,” Gov. Rick Scott said Thursday. “Time is running out.”
1,500: Flights canceled
As of Wednesday morning, about 1,500 flights have been canceled as Matthew approaches the southeastern US. That number could rise as the hurricane starts thrashing the coast.
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