Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Hurricane Iota closing in on storm-battered Central America

-

BILWI, Nicaragua — Hurricane Iota is forecast to strengthen to an “extremely dangerous” Category Four by the time it makes landfall in Central America today, the US National Hurricane Center (NHC) warned, two weeks after powerful storm Eta devastated much of the region and left more than 200 people dead or missing.

Iota strengthen­ed to hurricane force early yesterday as it tracked westward over the Caribbean towards the Nicaragua-honduras border.

Maximum sustained are near 90 mph (150 km/h) with higher gusts.

“Rapid strengthen­ing is expected during the next 36 hours, and Iota is forecast to be an extremely dangerous Category Four hurricane when it approaches Central America,” the Miami-based NHC said.

Moving slowly over the south-western Caribbean Sea, the hurricane was forecast to pass near or over the tiny Colombian island of Providenci­a late yesterday and hit north-eastern Nicaragua and eastern Honduras late today.

The NHC forecast “potentiall­y catastroph­ic winds, a life-threatenin­g storm surge and extreme rainfall” for Central America as Iota became the year’s 13th hurricane.

Honduras, Guatemala and Nicaragua announced evacuation­s Friday, even as the region was still reeling from the devastatio­n inflicted by Eta.

In the Nicaraguan coastal city of Bilwi, residents were desperatel­y trying to secure the roofs of flimsy wooded homes with the same zinc sheets ripped off by Eta.

Many people were wrapping their belongings in plastic bags to protect them from the coming rains.

“We are worried, nervous. Psychologi­cally we are not doing well, because losing our things and starting over is not easy. Some of us have old little houses and we risk losing everything,” Silvania Zamora told AFP.

Authoritie­s have ordered people to leave the area but many are refusing to leave out of fears of catching COVID-19.

“Some of us prefer to stay and die in our homes. There has never been a repeat hurricane in such a short time, but what can we do against the force of God and nature,” Zamora said.

Eta’s heavy rains burst river banks and triggered landslides as far north as Chiapas, Mexico.

Initial estimates show “some 80,000 families are going to be at risk,” said Guillermo Gonzalez, head of Nicaragua’s country’s disaster response agency Sinapred.

Evacuation­s were underway in communitie­s along the border with Honduras, he said.

Authoritie­s on Friday sent boats to evacuate the community in Cabo Gracias a Dios, where the Coco River flows into the Caribbean along the “Mosquito Coast”.

The NHC warned that Iota would deposit as much as 16 inches (40 centimetre­s) of rain on Honduras, northern Nicaragua, eastern Guatemala and southern Belize, with isolated totals of up to 30 inches.

Iota is packing “potentiall­y catastroph­ic winds, a life threatenin­g storm surge and extreme rainfall”, the NHC said.

Authoritie­s in Honduras on Friday ordered police and the army to evacuate the area of San Pedro Sula — the country’s second city and industrial capital, located 110 miles north of Tegucigalp­a.

Eta hit that area hard: About 40,000 people are still in shelters across the country.

The Government also ordered water released from Honduras’s main hydroelect­ric dam, due to danger of it overflowin­g from Iota’s rains.

Guatemala’s disaster management agency, CONRED, meanwhile called on residents in the north and north-east to voluntaril­y evacuate.

Eta hit the Caribbean coast of Nicaragua as a Category Four storm, one of the strongest November storms ever recorded.

Warmer seas caused by climate change are making hurricanes stronger for longer after landfall, scientists say.

This year’s hurricane season has seen a record 30 named tropical storms across the Caribbean, Central America and the south-eastern US.

 ?? NESDIS /AFP) (Photo: RAMMB/NOAA/ ?? This RAMMB/NOAA satellite image shows Tropical Storm Iota on November 14, 2020 at 13:50 UTC. Forecasts are that Iota will hit shellshock­ed countries Nicaragua and Honduras as a Category Four hurricane, today, less than two weeks after Eta.
NESDIS /AFP) (Photo: RAMMB/NOAA/ This RAMMB/NOAA satellite image shows Tropical Storm Iota on November 14, 2020 at 13:50 UTC. Forecasts are that Iota will hit shellshock­ed countries Nicaragua and Honduras as a Category Four hurricane, today, less than two weeks after Eta.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica