Stabroek News

Evacuation­s in New Orleans as storm that killed 25 approaches

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MANAGUA, (Reuters) - New Orleans evacuated some residents from areas outside its levee system as Tropical Storm Nate swirled toward the U.S. Gulf Coast on Friday after killing at least 25 people in Central America.

Nate is set to become a Category 1 hurricane, the weakest on a five-category scale used by meteorolog­ists, by the time it hits the U.S. central Gulf Coast on Saturday night or Sunday.

“Nate is at our doorstep or will be soon,” New Orleans mayor Mitch Landrieu said.

The greatest threat from this particular storm is not rain, but strong winds and storm surge, Landrieu said. The winds could cause significan­t power outages, and storm surges are projected to be six to nine feet (1.8 to 2.7 meters) high, he added.

“We have been through this many, many times. There is no need to panic,” Landrieu told a news conference.

Later on Friday, the storm is expected to brush by Mexico’s Yucatan peninsula, home to beach resorts such as Cancun and Playa del Carmen, before heading north into the Gulf of Mexico, according to the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami.

Nate was blowing maximum sustained winds of 60 miles per hour (97 kmh) and was about 80 miles (123 km) east of the Mexican resort island of Cozumel on Friday afternoon, the NHC said.

In the United States, a state of emergency was declared for 29 Florida counties and states near Nate’s path - Alabama, Louisiana and Mississipp­i - as well as the city of New Orleans, devastated by Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

The NHC issued a hurricane watch from Grand Isle, Louisiana to the Alabama/Florida border.

“By Saturday noon you should be in your safe place,” Alabama Governor Kay Ivey told a news conference. “This is a fast-moving storm and we must begin preparing now.”

Nearly three-quarters of U.S. Gulf of Mexico oil production was offline ahead of the storm, and more oil companies were halting operations late Friday.

On Friday afternoon, Nate was moving north-northwest at 21 miles per hour (34 kmh), a fast pace which if maintained could mean the storm does less damage when it hits land. (Trinidad Guardian) Three families are in mourning after a fatal accident yesterday which claimed the lives of birthday boy Alex Lalla, fireman Romel Rambally and Kareem Simon. According to police, the men were heading South along the Uriah Butler Highway, Chaguanas in a blue Toyota Corolla driven by Lalla, a fitness coach at Raw Fitness Health Club.

Around 4.30 am, on nearing the Munroe Road Overpass, Charlievil­le they crashed into a pillar of a walkover. Passing motorists called for help and Chaguanas police, the Highway Patrol Unit, Chaguanas firefighte­rs and ambulances responded.

However, Simon, 29, of Claxton Bay, Lalla, 27, of Couva and Rambally, 32, of Golconda had already died. Investigat­ors are still trying to determine the cause of the accident.

 ??  ?? Residents fill sandbags in preparatio­n for tropical storm Nate in New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S., October 6, 2017. REUTERS/ Jonathan Bachman
Residents fill sandbags in preparatio­n for tropical storm Nate in New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S., October 6, 2017. REUTERS/ Jonathan Bachman

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