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Hurricane Karl batters Mexico’s Gulf coast

by admin on Sep.17, 2010, under Natural Disasters, global climate change

Low-lying areas along Veracruz, already waterlogged from weeks of rain, were evacuated as the storm came ashore, shutting down the busy seaport. It weakened as it moved inland.

Hurricane Karl pounded Mexico’s Gulf coast with 115-mile-per-hour winds and torrential rains Friday, swamping the already waterlogged port of Veracruz and prompting flood alerts across central Mexico.

The storm, which soaked the Yucatan Peninsula this week before strengthening into a Category 3 hurricane over the Gulf of Mexico, came ashore about nine miles north of Veracruz.

By late afternoon, there were no reports of injuries or severe damage. Televised images showed pounding surf, felled trees, toppled billboards and streets turned into muddy rivers.

The storm came as tourists flocked to the port city during the Independence Day holiday weekend in Mexico. Within a few hours, the hurricane had weakened to Category 1 as it moved inland.

Mexican officials evacuated thousands of residents from low-lying areas and shut the Veracruz seaport, one of Mexico’s busiest. Flights were suspended to the city’s airport, and the main federal highway was closed as a precaution.

Officials urged residents to stay indoors as Karl churned toward the country’s interior. More than half a dozen states and the densely populated metropolitan area that includes the capital, Mexico City, were on alert for intense rains and possible flooding.

President Felipe Calderon warned that Veracruz could get as much as 8 inches of rain, and heavy downpours inland could cause flooding and mudslides over the weekend.

Soaking rains were the last thing coastal Veracruz state needed. More than 100,000 residents already had evacuated their flooded homes because of weeks of rains that overwhelmed rivers and swamped dozens of low-lying towns.

Veracruz Gov. Fidel Herrera warned residents early Friday that Karl could be the worst storm to hit the state since he took office in 2004.

Civil-protection officials were bracing across Mexico’s broad midsection, from coastal Tamaulipas to landlocked Puebla and Morelos, south of Mexico City. Because it is surrounded by mountains and has spotty infrastructure, the capital is prone to widespread flooding and power failures even during normal rainstorms.

Karl was a tropical storm when it crossed the Yucatan Peninsula this week, flooding 25,000 homes in the state of Quintana Roo, home to the beach resort of Cancun. In the neighboring state of Campeche, 11 communities were declared disaster zones.

By Ken Ellingwood

Waves buffet Maracaibo beach in Nautla, in the state of Veracruz. Hurricane Karl, a Category 3, made landfall on the Gulf coast at the start of the busy Independence Day holiday weekend.

Waves buffet Maracaibo beach in Nautla, in the state of Veracruz. Hurricane Karl, a Category 3, made landfall on the Gulf coast at the start of the busy Independence Day holiday weekend.

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