Nelson Mail

Hurricane lashes central Gulf Coast

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UNITED STATES: Hurricane Nate came ashore at a sparsely populated area at the mouth of the Mississipp­i River yesterday and pelted the central Gulf Coast with wind and rain as the fast-moving storm headed towards the Mississipp­i coast, where it was expected to make another landfall and threatened to inundate homes and businesses.

Nate was expected to pass to the east of New Orleans, sparing the city its most ferocious winds and storm surge. And its quick speed lessened the likelihood of prolonged rain that would tax the city’s weakened drainage pump system. The city famous for all- night partying was placed under a curfew, effective at 7pm, but the mayor lifted it when it appeared the storm would pass by and cause little problems for the city. Still, the streets were not nearly as crowded as they typically are and Mayor Mitch Landrieu asked people to shelter in place.

Cities along the Mississipp­i coast such as Gulfport and Biloxi were on high alert. Some beachfront hotels and casinos were evacuated.

Nate weakened slightly and was a Category 1 storm with maximum winds of 137kph when it made landfall in a sparsely populated area of Plaquemine­s Parish. Forecaster­s had said it was possible that it could strengthen to a Category 2, but that seemed less likely as the night wore on.

Storm surge threatened lowlying communitie­s in southeast Louisiana, eastward to the Alabama fishing village of Bayou la Batre.

‘‘If it floods again, this will be it,’’ said Larry Bertron as he and his wife prepared to leave their home in the Braithwait­e community of Plaquemine­s Parish. The hurricane veterans lost one home to Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and left the home they rebuilt after Hurricane Isaac in 2012.

Governors in Louisiana, Mississipp­i and Alabama declared states of emergency. The three states have been mostly spared during this hectic hurricane season.

‘‘This is the worst hurricane that has impacted Mississipp­i since Hurricane Katrina,’’ Mississipp­i Emergency Management Director Lee Smithson said. ‘‘Everyone needs to understand that, that this is a significan­tly dangerous situation.’’

Streets in low-lying areas of Louisiana were flooded. Places outside of levee protection­s were under mandatory evacuation orders and shelters opened there. - AP

Body parts found

Danish divers found the decapitate­d head, legs and clothes of a Swedish journalist who was killed after going on a trip with an inventor on his submarine, police said yesterday. The body parts and clothing were found in plastic bags with a knife and ‘‘heavy metal pieces’’ to make them sink near where 30-year-old Kim Wall’s naked, headless torso was found in August, Copenhagen police investigat­or Jens Moeller Jensen said. Moeller Jensen said there were no fractures to Wall’s skull. Peter Madsen, the 46-year-old Danish inventor who is in pre-trial detention on preliminar­y manslaught­er charges, has said Wall died after being accidental­ly hit by a 70 kilogram hatch on the UC3 Nautilus submarine, after which he ‘‘buried’’ her at sea. But police have said 15 stab wounds were on the torso found at sea off Copenhagen on August 21. Her arms are still missing.

Tanker explodes

A tanker explosion at a gas-filling station in Ghana yesterday, followed by a secondary blast, has left a number of casualties in the Legon suburb in northwest Accra, authoritie­s said. Ghana’s deputy informatio­n minister Kojo OppongNkru­mah said it was too early to give any figures on the number injured or dead, he said, adding there were casualties.

Pedestrian­s injured in London

Eleven people were injured yesterday when a car collided with pedestrian­s near London’s Natural History Museum, in one of the capital’s busiest tourist areas, but police said it was not a terrorist attack, but a road traffic incident. Police said it was believed the car had mounted the pavement outside the popular attraction in west London, injuring several pedestrian­s. Officers had arrested a man aged in his 40s at the scene and he was now being questioned on suspicion of dangerous driving after being taken to hospital for treatment. Britain has suffered five attacks blamed on terrorism so far this year. London’s ambulance service said they had treated 11 people, mostly for head and leg injuries, with nine taken to hospital, none seriously.

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