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Mexico braces for monstrous Hurricane Dean

by Staff Writers
Cancun, Mexico (AFP) Aug 20, 2007
Hurricane Dean barreled toward Mexico with monstrous force on Tuesday, lashing heavy rains along the Caribbean coast ahead of landfall expected within hours, officials said.

The killer storm strengthened into a "potentially catastrophic" category five hurricane Monday, whipping up maximum sustained winds of 260 kilometers (160 miles) per hour with higher gusts, the Miami-based National Weather Center said.

Only 28 Atlantic hurricanes are known to have reached that intensity since record keeping started in 1886.

The outer bands of the storm started late Monday hitting Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula, which braced for the full fury the hurricane was expected to unleash when it pounds ashore.

The storm already killed at least nine people across the Caribbean.

Authorities nonetheless heaved a sigh of relief as forecasters said Cancun and other popular tourist destinations along Mexico's Caribbean coast would likely be spared a direct hit, with Dean expected to make landfall in a less populated area further south.

Projections had Dean hitting land on the border with Belize near Chetumal, 300 kilometers (186 miles) away from the popular tourist resort of Cancun.

But fears that the usually crowded resorts could be battered by huge waves and flooded by storm surge, led to the evacuation of thousands of tourists.

At 0600 GMT Tuesday, the hurricane raged 160 kilometers (100 miles) east of Chetumal, and the National Hurricane Center said the eye of Dean "will make landfall along the east coast of the Yucatan Peninsula in a few hours."

Authorities also deployed about 1,000 police officers to prevent the type of looting that followed the devastation wrought by Wilma, a category five hurricane that killed 10 people and left millions of dollars in damages in Cancun two years ago.

Most of the Yucatan Peninsula's coastline was placed under a hurricane warning, as were all the coastal areas and islands of neighboring Belize, a central American country popular with divers for its barrier reef.

State-run Petroleos de Mexico (PEMEX) said it evacuated and shut down all its offshore oil installations in the Gulf of Mexico.

While rigs on the US side of the Gulf did not appear directly threatened, 10 of the 834 manned production platforms and 24 of the 101 rigs were evacuated, according to the government's Mineral Management Service.

Forecasters said the storm was expected to lose some of its strength as it crosses the Yucatan Peninsula on Tuesday, but could regain major hurricane status as it barrels over the warm Gulf of Mexico waters on the way to a second landfall later in the week in northern Mexico.

World oil prices dropped on Monday as forecasters indicated the hurricane appeared likely to spare energy facilities in the United States, the world's biggest consumer of crude.

In Jamaica, where one man died when his house caved in on him, residents began a massive clean-up one day after Dean toppled trees and power lines and flooded low-lying areas.

Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller announced security forces would be granted wider powers following reports of looting across the island that remained largely without power on Monday.

But Jamaica was spared the worst of Dean's massive punch as the storm's powerful inner wall brushed just past the island.

Hurricane Dean earlier swirled past Haiti, one of the world's poorest countries, lashing it with heavy rain and gale-force winds and leaving at least four people dead.

Two people were also killed in the French territory of Martinique and another two died in the Dominican Republic, while thousands of people across the region fled their homes.

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Hurricane reaches monstrous category five as it barrels to Mexico
Cancun, Mexico (AFP) Aug 20, 2007
Already a killer storm, Dean strengthened into a "potentially catastrophic" category five hurricane just hours before it was expected to slam Mexico's Caribbean coast early Tuesday.







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