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Hurricane Ike over water, may strengthen for return to Cuba

View of the flooded waterflont in Baracoa, eastern Cuba on September 7, 2008. The latest hurricane to tear through the Atlantic and Caribbean battered Turks and Caicos and the southern Bahamas Sunday and was hampering relief efforts in flood-devastated Haiti, as Cuba and the United States gird for the storm's wrath. Photo courtesy AFP

Hurricane Ike weakens to Cat-1 storm
Deadly Hurricane Ike has weakened to a category one storm with maximum winds of 130 kilometers (80 miles) per hour as it moves along Cuba's southern coast, the US National Hurricane Center said Monday. However, the NHC warned that "a slight increase in intensity is possible if the center remains over water" and that "strengthening is forecast once Ike moves into the Gulf of Mexico."
by Staff Writers
Havana (AFP) Sept 8, 2008
Killer Hurricane Ike moved out over open water Monday off Cuba's southern coast but continued hammering the island, as forecasters predicted a strengthening of the storm before it heads back over land toward the capital Havana.

The storm, which has left a trail of destruction through the Atlantic and Caribbean including 61 dead in Haiti, maintained Category Two status and winds near 160 kilometers (100 miles) per hour as it shifted west off Camaguey province and over the Ana Maria gulf, the US National Hurricane Center reported in its 1800 GMT bulletin.

"Some strengthening is possible during the next day or so while the system is over water," the NHC said.

Ike was about 405 kilometers (250 miles) east-southeast of Havana as of 1800 GMT, and with the NHC now forecasting the storm to hug the southern coastline and track further to the south of the city of 2.2 million people than predicted earlier Monday.

Cuban authorities however have put virtually the entire island under a hurricane warning, including Havana.

"In the sea it will intensify again," said Jose Rubiera, director of forecasting at Cuba's Institute of Meteorology. "Ike could reorganize over the warm sea waters."

The hurricane roared across Cuba Monday with torrential rain and gale-force winds, demolishing houses, crushing crops and, in the eastern town of Baracoa, sending seven-meter (23-foot) waves crashing into coastal buildings.

The NHC warned of storm surge flooding of up to three meters (12 feet) above normal along Cuba's southern coast and as much as 50 centimeters (20 inches) of rainfall in isolated places.

"These rains are likely to cause life-threatening flash floods and mud slides over mountainous terrain," the NHC said.

The storm has forced more than 1.8 million people -- including more than 9,000 foreign tourists -- to evacuate coastal or low-lying areas and head to shelters or to higher ground.

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Ike death toll in Haiti climbs to 61, including many children
Port-Au-Prince (AFP) Sept 8, 2008
Hurricane Ike has killed 61 people in Haiti, including 57 in a single village, civil protection officials said in an updated toll given Monday.







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