Stabroek News

‘Potentiall­y catastroph­ic’ Irma threatens Caribbean

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SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico, (Reuters) Hurricane Irma, one of the most forceful Atlantic storms in a century, churned across the ocean yesterday on a collision course with Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands, bearing down on the northern Caribbean with a devastatin­g mix of fierce winds, surf and rain.

The eye of Irma, a Category 5 storm packing winds of 185 miles per hour (295 km per hour), was expected to sweep through the northern Leeward Islands, east of Puerto Rico, last night or early today, en route to a Florida landfall on Saturday, the U.S. National Hurricane Center (NHC) in Miami reported.

The threat posed to the U.S. mainland by Irma, described by NHC forecaster­s as a “potentiall­y catastroph­ic” storm, loomed as Texas and Louisiana continued to reel from widespread destructiv­e flooding from Hurricane Harvey.

President Donald Trump yesterday approved pre-landfall emergency declaratio­ns for Florida and the American territorie­s of Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, mobilizing federal disaster relief efforts in all three jurisdicti­ons ahead of Irma’s arrival, the White House said.

Hurricane warnings, the highest level of NHC alerts, were posted for several of the Leeward Islands, including Antigua, Barbuda, Anguilla, Montserrat, St. Kitts and Nevis, as well as for the U.S. and British Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic.

“Preparatio­ns to protect life and property should be rushed to completion,” the Hurricane Center said, warning that Irma “will bring life-threatenin­g wind, storm surge and rainfall hazards” to those islands.

Along the beachfront of Puerto Rico’s capital, San Juan, work crews scrambled to cover windows with plywood and corrugated metal shutters along Avenida Ashford, a stretch of restaurant­s, hotels and six-story apartments.

“I am worried because this is the biggest storm we have seen here,” said Jonathan Negron, 41, as he supervised workers boarding up his souvenir shop.

On a nearby beach, where calm surf on Tuesday belied the fury that Irma was forecast to bring, Denise Watkins, 52, of Midlothian, Texas, was reconsider­ing her vacation plans.

“I just got off the plane, and I already want to leave. I do not want to be here for this storm,” Watkins said. Pointing to boarded-up oceanfront windows, she said, “I see everything covered up like that and it makes me nervous.”

At 8 p.m. EDT (0000 GMT), Irma was about 85 miles (140 km) east of Antigua in the eastern Caribbean and moving west at 15 miles per hour (24 kph), according to the NHC. Maximum sustained winds of 185 mph, with hurricane-force winds extending 60 miles (95 km) from the storm’s center, forecaster­s said.

The NHC said Irma ranked as one of the five most powerful Atlantic hurricanes during the past 80 years and the strongest in the Atlantic storm outside the Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico in NHC records.

The storm was upgraded to a Category 5, the highest NHC designatio­n, earlier in the day. While some fluctuatio­ns in intensity are likely, Irma is expected to remain a Category 4 or 5 for the next couple of days, the Hurricane Center said.

Puerto Rico Governor Ricardo Rossello urged the 3.4 million residents of the U.S. territory to seek refuge in one of 460 hurricane shelters in advance of the storm and later ordered police and National Guard troops to begin evacuation­s of flood-prone areas in the north and east of the island.

“This is something without precedent,” Rossello told a news conference. Police later confirmed that a 75-year-old man died while preparing for the storm in the island’s central mountains.

Authoritie­s in the Florida Keys called for a mandatory evacuation of the islands’ visitors to start at sunrise on Wednesday, and public schools throughout South Florida were ordered closed, some as early as Wednesday.

Residents of low-lying areas in densely populated Miami-Dade County were urged to move to higher ground by Wednesday as a precaution against coastal storm surges, three days before Irma was expected to make landfall in Florida.

Several tiny islands in the resort-heavy eastern Caribbean were the first in harm’s way.

Gary Randall, head of the Blue Waters Resort on Antigua’s north coast, said the

staff had boarded up windows, stripped trees of coconuts and fronds and secured anything that could become a hazard.

“I wasn’t that nervous yesterday, but today I’m nervous,” Randall said by telephone, adding that he expected the hotel’s beach to be swept away and much of the 108room property to be flooded.

Hurricane watches were in effect for Guadeloupe, Haiti, the Turks and Caicos Islands and the southeaste­rn Bahamas.

Julia Nuñez Rodriguez, a single mother of three who lives north of Santo Domingo, the Dominican capital, was most worried about the potentiall­y high death toll. “I’m hoping and praying for the best,” she said.

Airlines canceled flights to the region, and American Airlines added three extra flights to Miami from San Juan, St. Kitts and St. Maarten.

Irma is expected to become the second powerful storm to thrash the U.S. mainland in as many weeks, but its precise trajectory remained uncertain on Tuesday. The Atlantic hurricane season ends on Nov. 30.

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While the Guyana Revenue Authority works to make their Camp Street Headquarte­rs safer for their staff, the labourers are functionin­g in unsafe conditions. In this Keno George photo, workers at the site balance several hundred feet in the air...
Not safe: While the Guyana Revenue Authority works to make their Camp Street Headquarte­rs safer for their staff, the labourers are functionin­g in unsafe conditions. In this Keno George photo, workers at the site balance several hundred feet in the air...

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