Bahamas braces as Dorian heads for Florida

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Beachgoers in Palm Beach take advantage of the fine weather ahead of Hurricane Dorian bearing down on the Florida Coast, on Saturday. Photo: AFP

MIAM: Hurricane Dorian roared yesterday towards the Bahamas as the island chain braced for a devastating direct hit, before the monster storm churns up the US coast from Florida towards the Carolinas. Barreling in from the Atlantic Ocean, the core of the extremely dangerous Category 4 storm is set to be “near or over” parts of the north-western Bahamas yesterday, the US National Hurricane Centre (NHC) said in its latest bulletin at 0300 GMT. Further ahead the NHC said Dorian would “move closer to the Florida east coast late Monday through Tuesday” but exactly where — and how hard — it will strike the US coast looked uncertain after the storm shifted course, apparently sparing Florida the worst. In Grand Bahama, businesses were boarded up and thousands have evacuated Dorian’s predicted path with forecasts of devastating winds, life-threatening surf conditions, and storm surges of up to 4.5 to 6 meters.

Yasmin Rigby, a resident of the island’s main city Freeport, told AFP “people are moving out of the east and west ends, fearing the worst”. Grocery stores’ shelves were “just about cleared,” Rigby said, and most homes and businesses had been shuttered since Friday. She said memories of past hurricanes — including 2005’s historic storm Wilma — were still fresh. “It took weeks for water, food and electricity to be back to normal.” The storm’s leisurely pace of 13 kph means as much as 25 inches of rain could land in the northwestern Bahamas. That, coupled with the storm surge predictions, poses a fearful prospect for many of the islands, some barely feet above sea level.

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Beachgoers in Palm Beach take advantage of the fine weather ahead of Hurricane Dorian bearing down on the Florida Coast, on Saturday. Photo: AFP

Still, Rigby was among the Grand Bahamians who said they intend to ride the storm out. “Where I am, it’s not that bad. I will be filling tubs of drinking water tonight to wait it out,” she said. Currently located about 125 miles east of the Bahamas’ Great Abaco Island, Dorian will keep moving slowly westward for the next day or two but is forecast to turn northward. But the NHC has not ruled out the storm making landfall in Florida. “Uncertainty remains high as any small shifts in the track could substantially change the potential impacts for locations along the Southeast US coast,” the National Weather Centre Eastern Region wrote on Twitter. Dorian’s current strength, with maximum sustained winds of 240 kph and even more powerful gusts, makes it nearly a Category 5 hurricane — the highest and most damaging level.

In the Bahamas, government offices were closed and people rushed to prepare for a storm they were told could prove catastrophic. “The price you may pay for not evacuating is your life or other serious physical harm,” Prime Minister Hubert Minnis warned residents. Donald Trump, who cancelled a high-profile trip to Warsaw to focus on storm preparations, was “being briefed every hour,” his spokeswoman Stephanie Grisham told reporters who accompanied the president to his Virginia golf course Saturday.

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Given the storm’s uncertain path, coastal Florida residents were not yet under evacuation orders but were stocking up on supplies and weighing whether to flee their homes. The Florida National Guard said roughly 2,000 service members had been mobilized, with another 2,000 poised to join them. The US Coast Guard said large commercial vessels should plan to leave ports from south Florida to Savannah, Georgia, and advised pleasure craft to seek safe harbour. Several schools cancelled classes until at least Tuesday. Orlando International Airport said it would protectively halt commercial flights at 2am today. – AFP

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