FREEPORT, BAHAMAS. (THECOUNT) — As Hurricane Dorian hovered over the Bahamas on Monday, authorities in the area are urging people to find flotation devices and grab household tools like hammers to break out of their attics if they get trapped by rising waters.

The storm’s top sustained winds fell slightly to 155 mph, and its westward movement slowed almost to a standstill. The system slow-walked along Grand Bahama Island at just 1 mph and was expected to generate a massive storm surge of at least 23 feet.

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People were advised to “break roofs with hammers” to escape flooding as Hurricane Dorian assaults Bahamas An emergency management agency in the Bahamas hasn’t tweeted in 10 hours.

“We need you to bunker down,” Kwasi Thompson, minister of state for Grand Bahama, warned people. “It’s going to be another 10-12 hours that we’re going to be bombarded with this.”

Thompson and other officials said they received distress calls about rising floodwaters, but rescuers could not go out in the violent conditions.

On Sunday, Dorian churned over Abaco Island with battering winds and surf and unleashed heavy flooding as people called radio stations and sent desperate messages on social media to find loved ones, reports WSTP.

In other hurricane related news, an 8-year-old boy in the Bahamas has been identified as the first casualty of monster hurricane Dorian on Monday.

The boy’s grandmother, Ingrid McIntosh, told Eyewitness News that her grandson died on Abaco island. She said her 31-year-old daughter found the body of her son, who she believed drowned in the rising waters. McIntosh said her granddaughter is also missing.

“I just saw my grandson about two days ago,” she said. “He told me he loved me. He was going back to Abaco, he turned around and said, ‘Grandma, I love you,’” reports FOX6NOW.

Category 5 Hurricane Dorian is expected to continue moving slowly towards the United States later today after stalling out to 1 mph overnight in the Bahamas.

225 mph winds are currently battering the Bahamas, leveling homes, toppled power lines and killing at least one young boy on Monday.

The monster hurricane made landfall in the Bahamas, tying the record for the strongest storm ever to hit land.

The massive storm is churning above the island of Grand Bahama in a day-long assault.

Up to 30 inches of rain were expected in the area where a seven-year-old boy is believed to have perished.

Dorian was lingering over the Bahamas this morning – leaving an airport under five feet of water – but is expected to move towards the Florida coast later on Monday, reports DailyMail.

In the U.S. hundreds of thousands of people are being evacuated from their homes in Florida, Georgia and South Carolina amid warnings of a ‘life-threatening storm surge and hurricane force winds’.

The eastern seaboard is not currently forecast to take a direct hit, but experts say the storm is still ‘extremely dangerous’ and even a glancing blow could bring torrential rain and destructive winds.

‘This storm at this magnitude could really cause massive destruction. Do not put your life in jeopardy by staying behind when you have a chance to get out,’ warned Florida Governor Ron DeSantis.

In Washington, President Donald Trump met with his emergency management chiefs and declared ‘this looks monstrous.’

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Geo quick facts: The Bahamas is a coral-based archipelago in the Atlantic Ocean. Its 700-plus islands and cays range from uninhabited to packed with resorts. The northernmost, Grand Bahama, and Paradise Island, home to many large-scale hotels, are among the best known. Scuba diving and snorkeling sites include the massive Andros Barrier Reef, Thunderball Grotto (used in James Bond films) and the black-coral gardens off Bimini – wikipedia.