The Borneo Post

Tropical Storm Nate kills 22 in Central America

-

SAN JOSE: Tropical Storm Nate killed at least 22 people in Central America on Thursday as it pummelled the region with heavy rain while heading toward Mexico’s Caribbean resorts and the US Gulf Coast, where it could strike as a hurricane this weekend.

In Nicaragua, at least 11 people died, seven others were reported missing and thousands had to evacuate homes because of flooding, said the country’s vice president Rosario Murillo.

Emergency officials in Costa Rica reported that at least eight people were killed due to the lashing rain, including two children. Another 17 people were missing, while more than 7,000 had to take refuge from Nate in shelters, authoritie­s said.

Two youths also drowned in Honduras due to the sudden swell in a river, while a man was killed in a mud slide in El Salvador and another person was missing, emergency services said.

“Sometimes we think we can cross a river and the hardest thing to understand is that we must wait,” Nicaragua’s Murillo told state radio, warning people to avoid dangerous waters. “It’s better to be late than not to get there at all.”

Costa Rica’s government declared a state of emergency, closing schools and all other nonessenti­al services.

Highways in the country were closed due to mudslides and power outages were also reported in

The threat of the impact is increasing, so folks along the northern Gulf Coast should be paying attention to this thing.

parts of country, where authoritie­s deployed more than 3,500 police.

The Miami-based National Hurricane Centre (NHC) said Nate could produce as much as 38 cm in some areas of Nicaragua, where schools were also closed.

Nate is predicted to strengthen into a Category 1 hurricane by the time it hits the US Gulf Coast on Sunday, NHC spokesman Dennis Feltgen said.

At about 11pm Nate was some 153 km east- southeast of the Honduran island of Guanaja, moving northwest at 19 kph, the NHC said.

Blowing maximum sustained winds of 64 kph, Nate was expected to move across eastern Honduras on Thursday and enter the northweste­rn Caribbean Sea through the night.

The storm will be near hurricane intensity when it approaches Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula late on Friday (yesterday), where up to 20 cm of rain were possible, the NHC said.

Nate is expected to produce 6 to 15 to 25 cm of rain in southern Honduras, with up to 38 cm in some areas, the NHC said.

The NHC said a hurricane watch was issued from Morgan City, Louisiana, to the Mississipp­iAlabama border, including metropolit­an New Orleans, Lake Pontchartr­ain, and Lake Maurepas.

US officials from Florida to Texas told residents on Thursday to prepare for the storm. A state of emergency was declared for 29 Florida counties and the city of New Orleans.

“The threat of the impact is increasing, so folks along the northern Gulf Coast should be paying attention to this thing,” the NHC’s Feltgen said.

In Mississipp­i, the US Environmen­tal Protection Agency plans to release as a precaution­ary measure 151 million litres of acidic water from storage ponds at a Pascagoula waste site.

The release to a drainage bayou is intended to prevent a greater spill during the storm, the EPA said, adding there are no anticipate­d impacts to the environmen­t.

Major Gulf of Mexico offshore oil producers including Chevron, BP plc, Exxon Mobil Corp, Royal Dutch Shell Plc and Statoil were shutting in production or withdrawin­g personnel from their offshore Gulf platforms, they said.

About 14.6 per cent of US Gulf of Mexico oil production and 6.4 per cent of natural gas production was offline on Thursday, the US Department of the Interior’s Bureau of Safety and Environmen­tal Enforcemen­t said. — Reuters

Dennis Feltgen, NHC spokesman

 ??  ?? A resident watches the rising waves in Masachapa beach during heavy rains due to Tropical Storm Nate in the city of Masachapa, about 60km from the city of Managua. — AFP photo
A resident watches the rising waves in Masachapa beach during heavy rains due to Tropical Storm Nate in the city of Masachapa, about 60km from the city of Managua. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? People walk near Tiribi river flooded by heavy rains of Tropical Storm Nate that affects the country in San Jose, Costa Rica. — Reuters photo
People walk near Tiribi river flooded by heavy rains of Tropical Storm Nate that affects the country in San Jose, Costa Rica. — Reuters photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia