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Hurricane Dean Causes Damage in Caribbean
Comments 0 | Recommend 0CASTRIES, Saint Lucia (AP) - Hurricane Dean tore through the
eastern Caribbean islands of Saint Lucia and Martinique on Friday,
ripping roofs from buildings, downing trees and knocking out power.
Stay with KFDM TV for the latest on Hurricane Dean and its projected path.
Airports were closed, coastal hotels were evacuated and tourists
hunkered down in shelters as 100 mph winds swept over the islands.
The Category 2 storm was headed to Jamaica and by next week, when
it is projected to reach Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula and Central
America, it could strengthen into a dangerous Category 4 hurricane.
The eye of Dean, the first hurricane of the Atlantic season,
passed between St. Lucia and Martinique, which are less than 50
miles apart, the National Hurricane Center in Miami said.
The winds tore off the roof of the children's ward at Victoria
Hospital in Castries, the capital of St. Lucia. The patients had
been evacuated and no injuries were reported.
St. Lucia state radio reported that flooding and wind-blown
debris had turned the capital into "a total mess." Boulders that
had been part of a sea wall were shoved onto roads by the force of
storm surges. A boat also sat in the road, lifted off from the sea
by the storm.
Radio and television advisories urged people to stock up on
canned food and fill their cars with gasoline. Volunteers knocked
on doors to make sure people knew about the storm.
With utility poles downed, the power company turned off
electricity on the island to prevent anyone from being
electrocuted.
At 8 a.m. EDT, Dean was centered about 50 miles west-southwest
of Martinique and moving west at about 23 mph.
"We don't have a roof ... everything is exposed. We tried to
save what we could," said Josephine Marcelus, a resident of Morne
Rouge, a town in northern Martinique. "We sealed ourselves in one
room, praying that the hurricane stops blowing over Martinique."
"I saw the roof of a municipal building fly off. This is a very
hard thing to experience right now," said Louis Joseph Manscour,
deputy mayor of Trinite on Martinique.
Laurent Bigot, director of a crisis team on the French island,
warned people to stay inside.
It was too early to tell whether the storm would strike the
United States, but officials were gearing up for the possibility.
Texas was already dealing with the remnants of Tropical Storm Erin,
which dropped up to 7 inches of rain in parts of San Antonio and
Houston. Officials throughout central and southern Texas braced for
10 inches to 15 inches by Friday morning.
At least four people died Thursday in Erin's thunderstorms.
Shell Oil Co. evacuated 188 people this week from offshore
facilities in Erin's path and said Thursday that it was monitoring
Dean.
Martinique officials set up cots at schoolhouse shelters while
residents lined up at gas stations and emptied supermarket shelves.
"It's the first time I've seen this, all our water supply
completely gone in less than two hours," said Jean Claude, a
supermarket manager.
The National Hurricane Center said Dean would likely be a
Category 3 hurricane by the time it reaches the central Caribbean.
Forecasters said it appeared Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin
Islands would be spared the brunt of Dean's winds.
Dean could get closer to the Dominican Republic and Haiti, which
share the island of Hispaniola. As it approaches Mexico's Yucatan
Peninsula and Central America on Tuesday it could be a Category 4
hurricane, the hurricane center said. But forecasters always warn
that their intensity predictions can be inaccurate that far in
advance.
Forecasters predicted storm surge flooding at 2 to 4 feet above
normal tide levels near the center of Dean as it passes over the
Lesser Antilles and total possible rainfalls of 10 inches in
mountainous areas.
At 8 a.m. EDT, hurricane warnings were in effect for the islands
of St. Lucia, Martinique, Dominica and Guadeloupe.
Tropical storm warnings have been issued for the U.S. Virgin
Islands, the British Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, Antigua and
Barbuda, Montserrat, St. Kitts and Nevis, Anguilla and St. Maarten
and Grenada. The warnings were canceled for Barbados, St. Vincent
and the Grenadines.
On Dominica, just north of Martinique, winds that howled through
groves and homes damaged much of the banana crop, one of the
island's main exports.
About 300 American medical students from Dominica's Ross
University arrived in Puerto Rico after their families hired
private planes, said Dr. Mauricio Gomez, from the UCLA Medical
Center in California, whose fiancee was among the students.
At the Jungle Bay Resort & Spa, on Dominica's Atlantic coast,
about 18 guests spent Thursday night in a reinforced
steel-and-concrete shelter, hotel spokeswoman Laura Ell said.
"Everyone's very calm but taking it seriously," she said.
By GUY ELLIS
Associated Press Writer
------
Associated Press writers Ellsworth Carter in Roseau, Dominica
and Maura Axelrod in Fort-de-France, Martinique contributed to this
report.
(Copyright 2007 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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