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Last updated on February 13, 2012 at 0:10 EST

Hurricane Emily weakens, closes in on Jamaica

July 15, 2005

By Horace Helps

KINGSTON, Jamaica (Reuters) – Jamaica evacuated its old
pirate town, Port Royal, and other flood-prone coastal areas on
Friday as Hurricane Emily drew closer, the second hurricane to
threaten the Caribbean island in 10 days.

The government ordered thousands of people evacuated from
homes to schools and churches as a safety precaution, many of
them from Portmore, a city of 300,000 about 7 miles west of
Kingston, which routinely floods.

The small settlement of Port Royal, a bawdy hangout for the
legendary buccaneers of the Spanish Main four centuries ago,
was particularly vulnerable. The village, much of which was
cast into the sea by an earthquake in 1692, sits at the end of
a long spit of land on Kingston’s harbor south of the capital.

Jamaica was still tallying the damage from Hurricane
Dennis, which killed one person when it swept along the north
shore on July 7. The storm’s powerful core stayed offshore but
heavy rain and strong waves pounded the island.

Dennis killed 70 other people in Haiti, Cuba and the United
States.

“We have identified the communities that are most
vulnerable to flooding and will be placing special emphasis on
these,” Jamaican Environment Minister Dean Peart said.
“Transportation is in place to move citizens and we are
stocking up the shelters with bedding, food and other items.”

Authorities closed government offices early on Friday and
urged businesses to send employees home. Fishermen returned to
shore and secured their boats.

At 5 p.m. EDT (2100 GMT), the center of Emily was located
about 350 miles southeast of Kingston and was moving to the
west at about 20 mph (32 kph), the U.S. National Hurricane
Center in Miami said.

Emily briefly reached Category 4 status on the five-stage
Saffir-Simpson hurricane scale on Friday when its sustained
winds hit 135 mph (217 kph). It had weakened to 105 mph (170
kph) by Friday afternoon.

Jamaica, the Cayman Islands, and southern areas of the
Dominican Republic and Haiti were under storm alerts.

Emily slammed beleaguered Grenada on Wednesday and
Thursday. The tiny spice island of 90,000 people was still
recovering from last September’s Hurricane Ivan, which damaged
90 percent of houses and buildings and caused about $2.2
billion in damage, double Grenada’s annual economic output.

One person was killed in a mudslide. The storm damaged the
roofs of Grenada’s general hospital and the hospital on
neighboring Carriacou.

The hurricane center’s forecast had Emily just south of
Jamaica on Saturday and crossing the northern tip of Mexico’s
Yucatan peninsula on Sunday before reaching the Texas-Mexico
border late on Tuesday.


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