Hurricane Melissa: Rare peek inside the eye of life-threatening hurricane targeting Jamaica

Hurricane Melissa, the strongest storm of 2025 and a rare Category 5 hurricane, barrels toward Jamaica with 280 km/h winds, threatening catastrophic flooding, landslides, and massive storm surges.

Hurricane Melissa: Rare peek inside the eye of life-threatening hurricane targeting Jamaica

Image Source: Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere

Hurricane Melissa has become the most powerful storm on Earth this year. It is a rare and massive Category 5 hurricane spinning through the Caribbean with winds screaming close to 280 km/h. Over the weekend, Melissa grew at an alarming speed turning from a tropical storm into a monster. Now it is moving straight toward Jamaica, threatening destruction not seen in decades. Here we bring you an exclusive peek from inside Hurricane Melissa, showing the storm’s unbelievable power as it closes in on the island.

By late Monday, the storm was hovering about 200 kilometres south-southwest of Jamaica-capital Kingston. It was creeping westward at just 5 to 6 kilometres per hour. This slow movement, forecasters warn, could make the disaster even worse.

The longer Melissa lingers, the more rain it dumps and the stronger its winds hammer the same areas again and again.

The US National Hurricane Center (NHC) has called Melissa a “potentially catastrophic” storm. For Jamaica, it could be the worst hurricane in the island’s modern history.

A nation on edge

Across Jamaica, life has come to a halt. Schools are closed, airports have been shut down, and emergency shelters are filling up as residents flee from low-lying and coastal regions. Prime Minister Andrew Holness has urged everyone to take the warnings seriously calling Melissa a “historic and life-threatening event.”

Evacuations are underway in vulnerable areas such as Port Royal and parts of the southern coastline. Authorities have already activated at least $33 million in emergency funding. With forecasts warning of up to 40 inches of rainfall that’s about a meter of water and storm surges as high as 13 feet, officials fear massive flooding, washed-out roads, and landslides that could isolate entire communities.

A slow-moving threat

Melissa’s pace is as worrying as its power. Moving sluggishly across the warm Caribbean waters, the hurricane is expected to pound Jamaica for many hours. Meteorologists say this “stalling” behavior traps regions under unrelenting rain and wind, magnifying the scale of destruction.

Experts explain that Melissa’s extraordinary strength comes from two main ingredients: extremely warm ocean temperatures roughly 2–3°C higher than normal, and calm upper-level winds. Together they created perfect conditions for rapid intensification.

In just 24 hours, Melissa went from a strong Category 2 to a devastating Category 5, a rate of strengthening rarely seen. “It’s a textbook case of how fast a storm can explode under the right conditions,” one meteorologist told local media.

Already leaving a trail of destruction

Before even reaching Jamaica, Melissa had already shown its fury. In Haiti and the Dominican Republic, torrential rain and violent gusts killed several people and forced thousands to flee their homes.

Early reports suggest at least seven lives have been lost. Three in Haiti, three in Jamaica, and one in the Dominican Republic.

The NHC’s latest update warned of “catastrophic and life-threatening flash flooding and numerous landslides” in Jamaica and nearby islands through Tuesday.

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