Hurricane Iota bears down on storm-battered Central America


Vehicles trapped at a landslide site in Antioquia, Colombia, yesterday. The storm Iota is expected to produce rains until next Wednesday in Honduras and parts of Nicaragua, Guatemala, El Salvador and Belize, as well as in sectors of Colombia, Panama, Costa Rica and Jamaica. – EPA pic, November 15, 2020.

LESS than two weeks after powerful storm Eta killed more than 200 people across Central America, authorities warned that Hurricane Iota was set to wallop coastal areas of Nicaragua and Honduras tomorrow.

As of 0300 GMT today, Iota – the latest in an unusually busy storm season – was about 705km east-southeast of the Cabo Gracias a Dios on the Nicaragua-Honduras border, moving slowly westwards with maximum sustained winds of 120kph.

Iota was upgraded to a hurricane early today, the Miami-based National Hurricane Centre (NHC) said.

“Reconnaissance aircraft finds Iota has strengthened into the 13th hurricane of the 2020 Atlantic hurricane season,” it tweeted.

Iota is projected to hit the Colombian island of Providencia by late today and is expected to rapidly strengthen into a major hurricane as it approaches Central America.

“It is likely that the heavy rainfall from Iota, through Thursday, will lead to life-threatening flash flooding and river flooding in parts of northern Colombia and Central America,” the NHC warned.

“The flooding and mudslides in Honduras and Nicaragua may be exacerbated by the recent effects of Hurricane Eta in those areas, resulting in significant impacts.”

Honduras, Guatemala and Nicaragua announced evacuations Friday, even as the region was still reeling from the devastation inflicted by Eta.

Eta’s heavy rains burst river banks and triggered landslides as far north as Chiapas, Mexico.

The NHC warned that Iota would deposit as much as 40cm of rain on Honduras, northern Nicaragua, eastern Guatemala and southern Belize.

‘Life-threatening’

That could lead to “significant, life-threatening flash flooding and river flooding, along with mudslides”, the NHC said.

Authorities in Honduras on Friday ordered police and the army to evacuate the area of San Pedro Sula – the country’s second city and industrial capital, north of Tegucigalpa.

Eta hit that area hard: about 40,000 people are still in shelters across the country.

The government also ordered water released from Honduras’s main hydroelectric dam, due to danger of it overflowing from Iota’s rains.

In Nicaragua, authorities were preparing for “floods, rain, high tides, wind and landslides on saturated soil”, said Guillermo Gonzalez, head of the country’s disaster response agency Sinapred.

Initial estimates show “some 80,000 families are going to be at risk”, he said, with evacuations under way in communities along the border with Honduras.

Authorities on Friday sent boats to evacuate the community in Cabo Gracias a Dios, where the Coco River flows into the Caribbean along the “Mosquito Coast”. 

Guatemala’s disaster management agency CONRED, meanwhile, called on residents in the north and northeast to voluntarily evacuate. 

Eta hit the Caribbean coast of Nicaragua as a Category 4 storm, one of the strongest November storms ever recorded.

Warmer seas caused by climate change are making hurricanes stronger for longer after landfall, scientists said.

This year’s hurricane season has seen a record 30 named tropical storms across the Caribbean, Central America and the southeastern US. – AFP, November 15, 2020.


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