Albuquerque Journal

Hurricane Nana hits Belize, Guatemala

Banana plantation­s took the brunt of the storm in Belize

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PUNTA GORDA, Belize — Hurricane Nana made landfall in Belize, pelting a relatively sparsely populated stretch of the country’s coast with heavy rain and wind, before weakening to a tropical depression while pushing across Guatemala on Thursday.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center reported that Nana hit land between the coastal towns of Dangriga and Placencia shortly after midnight at an area around 50 miles south of Belize City with maximum sustained winds of 75 mph, making it barely a hurricane. The storm was moving westward at 15 mph.

Later, Nana weakened to a tropical depression with maximum sustained winds near 35 mph. It was centered about 220 miles west-northwest of Belize City and neared the border with Mexico.

Guatemala reported heavy rains, especially along its border with Mexico. The country’s national disaster coordinato­r reported no deaths and said no one had been moved to shelters.

Forecaster­s said it was unlikely to restrength­en after emerging over the Pacific.

Belize authoritie­s did not report any injuries. More than 4,000 people, primarily in the south of the country, moved to government shelters.

Belize Red Cross Director General Lily Bowman said teams were assessing damages across the country, but so far unconfirme­d reports indicated the worst impact was on banana plantation­s.

“People were in full preparedne­ss mode for this storm and activated their emergency plans so since it was not a big storm and the damage is contained and minimal in most areas it can be considered a good simulation,” she said.

Thousands of people stocked up on food, water and constructi­on materials Wednesday ahead of the landfall. Long lines stretched through supermarke­ts and hardware store shelves were nearly bare.

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