Millennium Post

Hawaii on edge as Hurricane Lane slows its roll

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HONOLULU: Torrential rain pounded Hawaii as Hurricane Lane crawled toward the island state, triggering landslides and "catastroph­ic" flooding, while forcing thousands to seek emergency shelter. By midafterno­on, Lane was located around 190 kilometers south of the capital Honolulu, but had slowed its north-northeastw­ard progressio­n to a pedestrian two miles per hour.

Experts worry the eye of the storm will pass dangerousl­y close to portions of the central Hawaiian islands later Friday and Saturday before turning westward and away from the danger zone.

"Regardless of the hurricane track, life-threatenin­g impacts will extend far beyond the center position as Lane approaches the islands," the National Weather Center said.

"Excessive rainfall associated with this slow moving hurricane will continue to impact the Hawaiian Islands into the weekend, leading to catastroph­ic and life-threatenin­g flash flooding and landslides."

Meteorolog­ists have downgraded the system to a Category One storm, with maximum sustained winds of 85 miles per hour. A tropical storm warning was in place on Big Island, while hurricane warnings remained in place for Oahu and Maui, the two most populated islands.

Brad Kieserman, vice president of Disaster Operations and Logistics for the American Red Cross, told a news conference more than 2,000 people

were sheltering in 45 evacuation centers.

"I would not be surprised to wake up tomorrow morning and see evacuation center population­s at or above 2,500

or 3,000," he added.

Almost 60 centimeter­s of rain fell on the iconic Waikiki Beach in the last 36 hours, forcing its closure as hoteliers and store owners piled sandbags outside their businesses.

The mainly-rural Big Island -- home to the still-erupting Kilauea Volcano -- has taken the worst hit so far, however, with more than 30 inches of rain in about 24 hours.

Experts warned of "whiteout conditions" -- steam loaded with particles and toxic gases produced when lava hits cool moisture -- as the storm hits.

"The hurricane should not have a significan­t effect on the eruption aside from minor rockfalls at the summit and increased steaming from Puu Oo and Lerz vents," the US Geological Survey said.

"Whiteout conditions could occur on the new lava field due to steam produced by heavy rain falling on still-hot lava flows."

 ??  ?? Large waves crash against the shoreline on the east side of Oahu as Hurricane Lane approaches Honolulu, Hawaii, U.S.
Large waves crash against the shoreline on the east side of Oahu as Hurricane Lane approaches Honolulu, Hawaii, U.S.

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