San Francisco Chronicle

3 dead as Hurricane Eta blows through Nicaragua

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MANAGUA, Nicaragua — Hurricane Eta churned inland through northeast Nicaragua Tuesday night with devastatin­g winds and rains that destroyed rooftops, caused rivers to overflow and left at least three people dead in the region.

The hurricane had sustained winds of 105 mph, according to the U. S. National Hurricane Center, down from an overnight peak of 150 mph. Even before it made landfall as a Category 4 hurricane, Honduras reported the first death after a mudslide trapped a 12yearold girl in San Pedro Sula and two miners were killed in a mudslide in Bonanza, Nicaragua.

Tuesday night, the Category 2 hurricane crawled inland from the coast, about 45 miles westsouthw­est of coastal Puerto Cabezas or Bilwi, and it was moving west near 6 mph.

Landfall came hours after it had been expected. Eta’s eye had hovered just offshore through the night and Tuesday morning. The unceasing winds uprooted trees and ripped roofs apart, scattering corrugated metal through the streets of Bilwi, the main coastal city in the region. The city’s regional hospital abandoned its building, moving patients to a local technical school campus.

“It was an intense night for everyone in Bilwi, Waspam and the communitie­s along the northern coast,” Yamil Zapata, local Bilwi representa­tive of the ruling Sandinista Front, told local Channel 4 Tuesday.

Guillermo Gonzalez, director of the country’s emergency management agency, said about 10,000 people were in shelters in Bilwi and an equal number in smaller towns across the region, he said.

Inland, about 100 miles west of where Eta made landfall, two gold miners were killed when a mountainsi­de unleashed tons of mud. A third miner escaped the slide and sought help.

One body was recovered before rescuers had to suspend recovery efforts due to nightfall and fears that more slides could occur as the rain continued, said Lt. Cesar Malespin of the Bonanza Fire Department. He said recovery efforts would continue Wednesday.

The storm has been drenching neighborin­g Honduras with rains since at least Sunday and the country reported its first death attributed to Eta early Tuesday.

A 12yearold girl died in a mudslide in San Pedro Sula, the main population center in northern Honduras, said Marvin Aparicio, director of the national system of incident commands for Honduras’ emergency management agency.

In Honduras, there were at least 559 people affected by flooding who had to move to shelters or go to relatives’ homes, he said. At least 25 people had been rescued, he said. His agency reported at least six rivers causing significan­t flooding.

This could be only the beginning of Eta’s destructio­n. The storm was forecast to spend much of the week meandering over Central America.

Eta is the 28th named Atlantic storm this season, tying the 2005 record for named storms. It’s the first time the Greek letter Eta has been used as a storm name because after the 2005 season ended, meteorolog­ists went back and determined a storm that should have been named wasn’t.

 ?? Inti Ocon / AFP via Getty Images ?? About 10,000 people were in shelters in Bilwi, Nicaragua, and an equal number in smaller towns.
Inti Ocon / AFP via Getty Images About 10,000 people were in shelters in Bilwi, Nicaragua, and an equal number in smaller towns.

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