Kuwait Times

Powerful hurricane wreaks havoc on Bermuda

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HAMILTON, Bermuda: Hurricane Nicole plowed directly into Bermuda on Thursday, causing widespread damage and knocking out power to most homes and businesses while apparently sparing the tiny Atlantic island chain any severe injuries or fatalities, government officials said. Nicole, the strongest hurricane to sweep the subtropica­l British territory in more than a decade, made landfall before noon, packing sustained winds of up to 195 kph and ranking as a fierce Category 3 storm on the five-level Saffir-Simpson scale, according to the US National Hurricane Center in Miami.

By then the low-lying archipelag­o, occupying just 54 sq km and home to more than 65,000 people, had been lashed for hours with torrential rain, hurricane-force winds and pounding surf. In the village of Flatts, just outside Bermuda’s capital city of Hamilton, towering palm trees were bent over virtually at 90-degree angles in the howling winds, and boats moored at a nearby inlet rocked in the heavy waves. “For a storm this size, I’d say we’re blessed,” Bermuda Premier Michael Dunkley told Reuters by telephone. “I don’t think any part of the island was spared the wrath of Nicole. But ... it could have been much worse.”

The storm, with an eye about 48 km across, weakened after moving back into the open sea and was downgraded to a Category 2 hurricane, its maximum sustained winds diminished to 175 kph. The Royal Gazette newspaper said the storm sheared rooftops from buildings, uprooted trees, flooded homes and downed power lines as it slammed into Bermuda, a major tourist destinatio­n and affluent insurance industry hub about 1,030 km off the coast of North Carolina.

Passage of the hurricane’s eye provided a lull for about an hour, during which the skies cleared, the rain and winds ceased and some islanders emerged from boarded-up homes to stroll outside briefly. One person was even seen riding a bicycle through the streets, strewn with debris and vegetation. “At this point, there is no indication of any loss of life or serious injuries, Dunkley said. He said property damage was widespread, “but it’s not significan­t where it’s going to take weeks and months” to recover.

The Bermuda Electric Light Company (BELCO) said that nearly 26,000 customers were without power, roughly 85 percent of its customers, and that many power lines and utility poles had been knocked down. By early evening, winds had diminished to below tropical storm-strength and repair crews were able to venture safely into the streets to begin assessing damage as the storm moved farther from shore, Dunkley said. The internatio­nal airport there was expected to reopen on Friday, he said.

 ?? — AP ?? ST GEORGES, Bermuda: A sailboat lays damaged on the shore of Ferry Reach after breaking free from its mooring after the passing of Hurricane Nicole on Thursday.
— AP ST GEORGES, Bermuda: A sailboat lays damaged on the shore of Ferry Reach after breaking free from its mooring after the passing of Hurricane Nicole on Thursday.

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