The Timaru Herald

Caribbean islands prepare for another battering

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CARIBBEAN: The fourth major Atlantic hurricane of the year, Maria, strengthen­ed into a rare Category 5 storm, as it churned through the eastern Caribbean, bearing down on the tiny island nation of Dominica while on a likely collision course with the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico.

Maria was upgraded as its maximum sustained winds reached 215kmh, with higher gusts, the United States National Hurricane Centre (NHC) reported.

The centre of the storm, described by the NHC as ‘‘potentiall­y catastroph­ic’’, was on a track that would put it over Puerto Rico by tomorrow, according to the agency’s latest bulletins.

Dominica, a heavily forested former British colony home to 72,000 people, lies in the eastern Caribbean about halfway between the French islands of Guadeloupe, to the north, and Martinique, to the south.

Maria would be the most powerful hurricane to hit Puerto Rico in 85 years, since a Category 4 storm swept the US island territory in 1932, Hurricane Centre spokesman Dennis Feltgen said. The last major hurricane to strike Puerto Rico directly was Georges, which made landfall there as a Category 3 storm, he said.

The governor of Puerto Rico, Ricardo Rossello, urged island residents to brace for the storm’s arrival, saying, ‘‘It is time to seek refuge with a family member, friend or head to a state shelter’’.

Puerto Rico narrowly avoided a direct hit two weeks ago from Hurricane Irma, which reached a Category 5 status and ranked as the most powerful Atlantic storm on record before devastatin­g several smaller islands, including the US Virgin Islands of St Thomas and St John. Residents of some islands fled in advance of the storm.

US Virgin Islands Governor Kenneth Mapp said Maria was due to pass within 16km of the island of St Croix, which escaped the brunt of Irma’s Category 5-force fury on September 6 and is home to about 55,000 year-round residents, roughly half of the entire territory’s population.

The territory’s two other main islands, St Thomas and St John, which lie to the north of St Croix, sustained widespread heavy damage from Irma. – Reuters

Arrests follow riot

A mob opposed to public discussion of Indonesia’s 1965 massacre of communists tried to force its way into a Jakarta building where they believed communists were meeting, injuring five policemen. Jakarta police spokesman Argo Yuwono said 22 people were arrested early Monday for rioting and five officers were injured in the confrontat­ion. The melee came after police blockaded the building on Saturday to stop a public forum on the massacre, in which historians say half a million people were killed, from going ahead.

Shooting victims sue

A man performing oral sex on a woman in a Melbourne nightclub says he didn’t know police officers were there until they shot him in the back. Dale Ewins, 35, and Zita Sukys, 37, lodged a statement of claim in the Supreme Court of Victoria yesterday seeking damages from the State of Victoria over the police shooting at the Inflation Nightclub in the early hours of July 8 this year. Ewins suffered a perforated bowel and a fractured left shoulder, while Sukys needed leg surgery. They are seeking hundreds of thousands of dollars in damages. Cops stormed the King S nightclub following what they later said were reports of a man armed with a gun in an upstairs room. Attending a fancy dress event, Ewins was carrying a fake gun as part of his Joker outfit, while Sukys was dressed as Suicide Squad character Harley Quinn.

Calls for Assad to go

The United States, Britain and other countries opposed to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad will not support the reconstruc­tion of the country until there is a political transition ‘‘away from Assad’’, British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson said yesterday. The ‘‘Friends of Syria’’ group, an alliance of mainly Western and Gulf Arab countries, met in New York yesterday on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly at a time when the conflict in Syria, now in its seventh year, appears to be less urgent with attention focused on the North Korean nuclear threat and the fate of the Iran nuclear deal.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? A Marine Corps MV-22B Osprey takes off from the USS Kearsarge aircraft carrier as US military continues to evacuate personnel from the US Virgin Islands in advance of Hurricane Maria.
PHOTO: REUTERS A Marine Corps MV-22B Osprey takes off from the USS Kearsarge aircraft carrier as US military continues to evacuate personnel from the US Virgin Islands in advance of Hurricane Maria.

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