Oman Daily Observer

Trump declares emergency as hurricane menaces Hawaii

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HAWAIIAN OCEAN VIEW: US President Donald Trump on Thursday declared a state of emergency in Hawaii, releasing disaster funds as powerful Hurricane Lane bears down on the archipelag­o’s Big Island.

US weather authoritie­s said Lane had weakened slightly to a Category 4-storm but was still packing maximum sustained winds of 215 kilometres per hour, threatenin­g torrential rains, high winds and dangerous surf.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion warned in its latest advisory that Lane could produce “excessive rainfall” that would deluge the islands into the weekend, “leading to significan­t and life-threatenin­g flash flooding and landslides.”

“The state is going to be heavily impacted,” said Jeff Byard, associate administra­tor of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).

“We are anticipati­ng that communitie­s will be isolated because of the rain, that communicat­ions will be spotty,” he said.

Trump had earlier urged Hawaiians to hunker down and prepare for the major storm, while the US Navy said it was deploying some of its Hawaiibase­d ships and submarines to avoid getting trapped when Lane hits.

Residents were stocking up on water, food and emergency supplies as Lane was tracking some 370 kilometres southwest of Kailua-kona, a town on the west coast of the Big Island.

Forecaster­s said the slow-moving storm would generate large swells in the coming days that would produce “very large and damaging surf” on shorelines facing west and south, likely triggering “significan­t coastal erosion.”

Sea levels in that area were expected to rise as much as two to four feet above normal tide levels, prompting a storm surge and “large and destructiv­e waves.”

Lane’s centre was expected to sweep very close or over Hawaii’s main islands later on Thursday or Friday, the NOAA said.

The storm’s wind power was expected to weaken into the weekend, but forecaster­s warned it would remain a hurricane as it approaches the islands.

Governor David Ige had already on Tuesday declared a state of emergency on the Big Island to help provide relief for damage from the hurricane.

“Hurricane Lane is not a well-behaved hurricane,” he said in a statement. “I’ve not seen such dramatic changes in the forecast track as I’ve seen with this storm.

Residents were stocking up on water, food and emergency supplies as Lane was tracking some 370 kilometres southwest of Kailua-kona

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