Albuquerque Journal

Category 4 hurricane barrels toward Mexico’s Pacific coast

Willa expected to make landfall this afternoon or evening

- BY CARMEN PENA

MEXICO CITY — Mexico on Monday was bracing for the arrival of Hurricane Willa, which was downgraded from a Category 5 to a Category 4 storm, but was neverthele­ss expected to wreak havoc on the country’s Pacific coast.

The hurricane will gradually weaken, but is still expected to be “a dangerous major hurricane when it reaches the coast of Mexico,” the U.S. National Hurricane Center (NCH) said on Monday.

Willa could produce a “life-threatenin­g” storm surge, wind and rainfall accompanie­d by large and destructiv­e waves, with a “potentiall­y catastroph­ic” impact on western-central and southweste­rn regions of the country, according to the NHC.

The hurricane’s sustained winds were travelling at 155 miles per hour. It was expected to make landfall along the west-central coast of mainland Mexico this afternoon or evening, the meteorolog­ical service said.

The states of Jalisco, Michoacan, Nayarit and Sinaloa meanwhile started preparing protective measures such as evacuation­s and setting up temporary shelters.

The hurricane has already sparked heavy rains in Michoacan, where helicopter­s were flying above affected areas to see if help was needed, the state’s civil protection authoritie­s said on Twitter.

In Jalisco, the authoritie­s were prepared for “a safe and fast evacuation,” the state’s civil protection director Trinidad Lopez told the broadcaste­r Milenio.

About 2,000 soldiers and civil protection personnel were deployed in Nayarit. School classes were suspended in 11 municipali­ties in Nayarit and in seven municipali­ties in Sinaloa, according to Milenio.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States