The storm has
killed hundreds in the Caribbean, almost entirely in
Haiti. More than 330 people died in Haiti, according to a spokesman for Haiti’s Civil Protection Service. Others report much higher deaths. A count by Reuters, based on information from local civil protection officials, puts the death toll in Haiti well over 800. Four deaths were reported in the Dominican Republic and one in St. Vincent and the Grenadines.
• Three people died in North Carolina while four died in Florida, authorities said.
Three people died in Georgia, including a man killed when a tree fell on his house, authorities said.
That brought the US death toll to at least 10 people.
As of 8 p.m. ET, Matthew’s center was 40 miles east of Cape Fear, North Carolina. The storm was moving east-northeast at 13 mph as a Category 1 hurricane and was expected to become a post-tropical storm in the next 36 hours.
• More than 2 million utility customers were reported without power Saturday night in South Carolina (833,000), Florida (673,000), North Carolina (457,000) and Georgia (276,000).
Flooding in Georgia, South Carolina
In the coastal Georgia city of Savannah, 85-year-old Sue Alice Walker said she was sleeping in her house when she awoke early Friday evening to find water — eventually about 3 inches — flowing inside.
“First I saw it in the living room, then in the kitchen, and then last it came in my son’s room,” she told CNN’s Sara Ganim, adding that she spent the rest of the night and much of Saturday morning mopping and shoveling the water into buckets.
Storm surges sent water spilling into Myrtle Beach’s streets early Saturday afternoon, before the storm’s center arrived, video posted to social media by reporters with
CNN affiliate WPDE showed.
Matthew left more than 100 roads impassable in the Charleston area Saturday morning, and damage assessments had yet to be completed in a large portion of the state, officials said.
South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, who’d warned coastal residents to evacuate ahead of the storm, asked them to stay away a while longer Saturday morning.
“I’m going to ask for patience. … Do not plan to go home,” Haley said, asserting that driving conditions still weren’t safe.