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Hurricane Melissa, a Category 5 hurricane, begins to lashing Jamaica.

Hurricane Melissa started pounding Jamaica on Monday with fierce gusts as the U.S. National Hurricane Center upgraded it to a category 5 storm, packing sustained winds exceeding 165 mph. This is the strongest hurricane to ever hit the Caribbean island. The storm is expected to pass through Cuba, Turks and Caicos, and the eastern Bahamas.

The hurricane will stay offshore and bring only minor coastal flooding and rough surf to the U.S. East Coast.

According to the NHC, Melissa was still about 330 km (530 miles) southwest from Guantanamo in Cuba at noon on Monday (1600 GMT). The center reported that the hurricane was moving west at only 3 mph (5 km/h), but it would make a turn north-northeast through Jamaica on Monday night and Tuesday morning.

Forecasters at the center said that the storm's slow motion over unusually tepid Caribbean waters had contributed to its growth and strength. Jamaica is now facing days of unprecedented catastrophic winds, and up to 3 feet of rainfall.

The NHC stated that the damage to infrastructure, power and communications outages and isolation of communities will be severe.

Authorities in Haiti and Dominican Republic, two island nations nearby, said that torrential rains have caused at least four deaths over the past few days.

Damian Anderson is a teacher in Hagley Gap. This town, nestled among Jamaica's Blue Mountains, has already been cut off by impassable roads.

"We can't move," Anderson, 47, said. "We're scared. "We've never experienced a multiday event before."

Evan Thompson of Jamaica's Meteorological Service said that Jamaica has experienced many hurricanes, including Category 4 Gilbert in 1988. However, a direct strike from a category 5 would be unprecedented.

The highest category on the Saffir Simpson scale is Category 5, with sustained winds greater than 157 mph.

CUBA PREPARATIONS

The eastern half of Cuba was also sacked in preparation for the expected landfall of the storm on Tuesday.

Cuban authorities reported that they evacuated more than 500,000 people from coastal and mountainous regions vulnerable to strong winds and flooding. Over 250,000 people have been brought into shelters in and around Santiago de Cuba. The island's second largest city is directly under the predicted hurricane path. In eastern Cuba, schools, buses, and trains were cancelled until further notice on Monday due to the arrival of Hurricane Irma.

Havana was not expected directly to be affected by the hurricane. Dave Sherwood, Havana and Zahra Burton in Kingston reported the story; Nia Williams edited it.

(source: Reuters)