A strengthening Hurricane Dean took aim at Mexico's Yucatan on Monday after battering Jamaica's southern coast, flooding its capital and littering streets with broken trees and roofs during a Caribbean rampage that has killed at least nine people.
Dean was an "extremely dangerous" Category 4 hurricane, the second-highest on the five-step Saffir-Simpson scale, and the U.S. National Hurricane Center said it could strengthen to a potentially catastrophic Category 5.
Carrying sustained winds of 150 miles per hour (240 km per hour), the storm was passing more than 100 miles (160 km) to the south of the tiny Cayman Islands, a British territory in the western Caribbean, en route to an expected strike on the Yucatan Peninsula and Belize early Tuesday.
The hurricane's powerful core was 440 miles (708 km) east of Belize City at 8 a.m. EDT/1200 GMT, and moving westward at about 21 mph (34 kph), the hurricane center said.
"Dean is passing by to the south of the Cayman Islands. Some of the outer rain bands are on them now," hurricane center forecaster Jamie Rhome said.
"It's far enough south that they will not get the core of the hurricane, but they will get tropical storm force winds."
The fiercest winds at Dean's center passed just south of Jamaica, but most of the mountainous island was still lashed by hurricane-force winds. Sheets of rain pelted the capital of Kingston and roads were blocked by toppled trees, power poles and smashed roofs.
Jamaican authorities said 300,000 people were displaced by the storm but no casualties had been reported yet. Mudslides were reported across the island and some main roads were blocked. Electricity remained off.
At least one man was missing after falling trees tore into his house. Police said they shot and wounded two men caught trying to break into a Kingston business during the storm.
Jamaican Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller declared a monthlong state of emergency and called a Cabinet meeting to discuss the potential impact on Aug. 27 general elections.










