Global Times

Maria hits Caribbean hard

Fears of upgrade to major hurricane in next two days

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A second powerful storm in as many weeks was bearing down on a string of battered Caribbean islands, with forecaster­s saying Maria would strengthen rapidly into a major hurricane as it ripped into the Leeward Islands on Monday night.

Maria’s strength was building as it approached the Lesser Antilles, the US National Hurricane Center said, estimating its winds near 145 kilometers per hour.

“Maria is expected to become a major hurricane as it moves through the Leeward Islands,” the forecaster said, marked by “rapid strengthen­ing” during the next 48 hours.

Maria is approachin­g the eastern Caribbean less than two weeks after Irma hammered the region before overrunnin­g Florida.

That storm, one of the most powerful ever recorded in the Atlantic with winds up to 298 kilometers per hour, killed at least 84 people, more than half of them in the Caribbean.

As of 2 am, the center of the storm was about 145 kilometers north-northeast of Barbados and about 270 kilometers east-southeast of the Leeward island of Dominica, moving to the west-northwest at about 20 kilometers per hour.

Hurricane conditions were expected for Guadalupe, Dominica, Martinique and St. Kitts, Nevis and Montserrat, and the hurricane center warned Puerto Rico to monitor the storm.

The British Virgin Islands and St. Martin, which was devastated by Hurricane Irma, were under a hurricane watch, as were the US Virgin Islands and Anguilla. More than 1,700 residents of Barbuda, where Irma damaged nearly every building, braced for Maria on neighborin­g Antigua, now under a tropical storm watch, said Ronald Sanders, the country’s ambassador to the US.

Puerto Rico has already begun preparatio­ns for Maria, which by Tuesday was expected to unleash powerful winds on the US territory, already dealing with a weakened economy and fragile power grid.

Damage to Puerto Rico could also disrupt the disaster relief supply chain to other islands that were hit by Irma.

“Puerto Rico is our lifeline,” said Judson Burdon, a permanent resident of Anguilla who has helped coordinate supply shipments to the island.

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