Aerial shots have revealed the massive scale of damage caused by Hurricane Michelle in Cuba. Thousands of acres of crops were destroyed, farm processing factories lying in ruins nearby.

Flooded fields and towns have been flooded, at least two thousand homes destroyed and tens of thousands of residents left homeless.
Cuban Civil Defence units have been deployed across the affected areas, trying to determine the extent of the damage.
Five deaths have been confirmed across the country.
Four people were killed in separate building collapses in Havana and Matanzas province to the east.
One man drowned in Playa Larga on the coast in Matanzas, where Michelle made landfall.
Agricultural damage was particularly severe in the central province of Matanzas, where 99-thousand tons of oranges were lost, the Communist Party daily Granma said on Tuesday.
Tobacco seed beds for the plants used to make Cuba's famed cigars were wiped out by the storm.
The province's crop of plantains, a staple food in this Caribbean nation, was also devastated.
Civil Defence officials said at least 10-thousand homes had been damaged in Matanzas province, of which 2-thousand were razed to the ground.
Damage to telephone lines and microwave antennae that provide long distance service have badly affected communications between Havana and outlying regions.
As a result, conditions in some parts of the island were still unknown, making it hard even for the government to assess the damage. Bureau Report