Kuwait Times

Evacuation­s ordered as Florida braces for Hurricane Michael

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MIAMI: Residents of northwest Florida had until today to leave their homes ahead of Hurricane Michael, forecast to crash ashore midweek as a major Category 3 storm with “lifethreat­ening” flash flooding possible. Governor Rick Scott’s office said mandatory evacuation orders were in place for parts of Bay County, which includes the popular Panama City beach resort, and areas in nearby Gulf and Franklin counties. “EVERY FAMILY must be prepared. We can rebuild your home, but we cannot rebuild your life,” Scott said. The alert came after the tropical storm system strengthen­ed to a Category 1 hurricane, packing maximum sustained winds late Monday of 85 miles per hour, the Miami-based National Hurricane Center (NHC) said.

By 0001 GMT, Michael was off the western tip of Cuba’s Pinar del Rio province, churning to the north at 12 miles per hour, across from Mexico’s Yucatan peninsula. Michael was forecast to push through warm, relatively shallow Gulf of Mexico waters before moving inland over the northern Gulf

coast of Florida. Michael was forecast to have the power to uproot trees, block roads and knock out power for days by the time it hits Florida on Wednesday. Then it is forecast to lash the southeaste­rn United States through Thursday. “Steady to rapid strengthen­ing is forecast during the next day or so, and Michael is forecast to become a major hurricane by tonight,” the NHC said. Earlier it said Michael could produce three life-threatenin­g hazards along portions of the northeaste­rn Gulf Coast: storm surge, heavy rainfall, and hurricanef­orce winds, with storm surge and hurricane watches in effect. The first rains from Michael already started to soak the Florida Keys on Monday. Up to four inches (10 centimeter­s) were expected to fall through today. Late Monday, residents of far western Cuba were forecast to get up to eight inches of rain. “This rainfall could lead to life-threatenin­g flash floods and mudslides,” the NHC warned.

‘Another big one’

President Donald Trump, who was in Orlando delivering an address to a global associatio­n of police chiefs, said the federal government was ready and urged residents to be prepared for the worst. “Can you believe it? It looks like another big one,” he said. Scott declared a state of emergency for 35 counties, activating 1,250 National Guard troops in preparatio­n for the storm. “We are running out of time,” the Republican governor said on Twitter. “TODAY is the day to get a plan, because tomorrow could be too late.”

“This storm will bring torrential rain, heavy winds and dangerous storm surges to many areas of our state,” he tweeted. Florida State University announced it was closing for the week yesterday, along with schools in Leon County, home to the state capital Tallahasse­e. Tallahasse­e’s Democratic Mayor Andrew Gillum, who is campaignin­g to succeed Scott as governor in next month’s elections, suspended his campaign and returned to the state capital to oversee storm preparatio­ns. —AFP

 ??  ?? FLORIDA: People line up for gasoline as Hurricane Michael bears down on the northern Gulf coast of Florida outside Tallahasse­e, Florida. —AFP
FLORIDA: People line up for gasoline as Hurricane Michael bears down on the northern Gulf coast of Florida outside Tallahasse­e, Florida. —AFP

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