The Star Malaysia

Hurricane lashes Hawaii

Tourists rescued as landslides and flash floods occur.

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honoLULU: Sirens wailed while workers piled sandbags in front of hotels and police blared warnings to tourists to leave the worldfamou­s Waikiki Beach as Hurricane Lane barrelled north after dumping nearly 60cm of rain on Hawaii’s mostly rural Big Island.

Emergency crews rescued five California tourists from a home they were renting in Hilo after a nearby gulch overflowed and it flooded on Thursday.

Suzanne Demerais said a tiny waterfall and small stream flowed near the home when she first arrived with four of her friends from the Los Angeles area. But the stream turned into a torrent and the river rose rapidly over 24 hours.

Hawaii County firefighte­rs, who were in touch with the home’s owner, decided to evacuate the group before the water rose further. They floated the five out on their backs, Demerais said.

“It was quite an experience because we weren’t planning to have a hurricane during our vacation time,” Demerais said.

Hurricane Lane, whose centre was still offshore, lashed the Big Island with nearly 50cm of rain in about 24 hours. It had maximum sustained winds near 193kph, making it a Category 3 hurricane.

Forecaster­s say the centre of the storm will move close to or over parts of Hawaii’s main islands, bringing dangerous surf of 6m.

About 320km north of Hilo, on the state’s most populated island of Oahu, employees of the Sheraton Waikiki resort filled sandbags to protect the oceanfront hotel from surging surf.

Stores along Waikiki’s glitzy Kalakaua Avenue stacked sandbags along the bottom of their glass windows to prepare for heavy rain and flash flooding.

Police on loudspeake­rs told surfers and swimmers to get out of the water, saying the beach would be closed until further notice.

The Marriott Resort Waikiki Beach in Honolulu designated a ballroom on the third floor as a shelter for guests and began removing lounge chairs from around the pool and bar area.

At the Hilton Hawaiian Village, guest Elisabeth Brinson said hotel staff left a notice that the rooms will still have water and phone service, and a backup generator would power one elevator per building in the event of a power outage.

Brinson, a native of the United Kingdom now living in Denver, said many shops were closed, and those still open were frantic with people buying food, beer and water.

“We knew it was coming, so I tried to just cram as much as I could into the last few days in anticipati­on so we could cross things off of our list,” said Brinson, who is accustomed to hurricanes after living in Florida.

Lane was not projected to make a direct hit on the islands, but officials warned that even a lesser blow could do significan­t harm. Some areas could see up to about 80cm of rain. — AP

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 ?? — AFP ?? Bracing for impact: The Outrigger Reef resort taking precaution­s in preparatio­n for Hurricane Lane by placing sandbags at beach-side entrances to the hotel, ahead of the hurricane.
— AFP Bracing for impact: The Outrigger Reef resort taking precaution­s in preparatio­n for Hurricane Lane by placing sandbags at beach-side entrances to the hotel, ahead of the hurricane.

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