Government officials said they would not know the full extent of the damage until Tuesday given it will be dark by the time weather conditions improve.
Fewer than 10 hurricanes have made direct landfall on the tiny island in the middle of the Atlantic since the National Hurricane Centre began tracking such disasters in the 1850s.
“We’ve managed to make it through a very serious hurricane,” said national security minister Renee Ming.
We are issuing advisories on five tropical cyclones over the Atlantic basin. This ties the record for the most number of tropical cyclones in that basin at one time, last set in Sept 1971. See https://t.co/tW4KeFW0gB for the latest updates. #Paulette #Rene #Sally #Teddy #Vicky pic.twitter.com/K32RyJBqbo
— National Hurricane Center (@NHC_Atlantic) September 14, 2020
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Paulette was centred north-north-east of Bermuda late on Monday afternoon and was heading north-north-east towards open water at 15mph. It had maximum sustained winds of 105mph, according to the centre.
Ms Ming had urged people to stay indoors and reminded the more than 70,000 residents who live on the island to protect themselves given the Covid-19 pandemic.
Bobbi Singh, who has lived in Bermuda for eight years, told the Associated Press that while she has been through a few hurricanes, every storm brings concerns.
“The biggest challenge was preparing in the midst of Covid-19,” she said. “It gave us more to think about when heading out to get supplies in crowded places.”
Bermuda is a wealthy financial haven featuring mostly stone and concrete construction required to withstand the winds of a strong Category 2 storm.
Faith Bridges, the owner of a hotel along the island’s northern tip, told the Associated Press by phone that she had finalised all preparations by Sunday and given her guests torches, warning them the power would go out, but she was not worried.
“We obviously have to prepare, but we’re built for it,” she said.
Ms Ming said she expects the international airport will reopen by Tuesday afternoon as officials warned people to stay off the roads after the hurricane, given the possibility of downed power lines.
The centre said in its forecast discussion that Paulette would become a major hurricane by Tuesday after it moves away from Bermuda.