Hurricane Rina barreled toward Cancun and other international tourist resorts early yesterday on track to strengthen before slamming into Mexico’s Caribbean coast.
Already packing 175kph winds, Rina was forecast to become a major Category 3 storm before making landfall near the sprawling resort city of Cancun today.
Rina was about 380km south of Cozumel, Mexico, the Miami-based National Hurricane Center (NHC) said in an advisory.
The storm was moving west at 6kph and was expected to dump between 20cm and 40cm of rain on the eastern Yucatan peninsula from early yesterday into tomorrow.
The NHC also warned of a storm surge of more than 2m above normal sea levels.
A hurricane warning was in effect for the east coast of the Yucatan Peninsula from Punta Gruesa up to Cancun on the northern tip. Honduras put its Caribbean resort island of Roatan under tropical storm watch.
The US Department of State on Tuesday warned its nationals living or on vacation in the area to prepare for the storm and perhaps consider leaving Mexico as flights could be disrupted once the storm starts to bear down.
“Identify local shelter, monitor local media reports, and follow the instructions of local emergency officials,” it said in a travel warning. “In some areas, adequate shelter from a severe hurricane may not be available to all who choose to stay.”
A Nicaraguan naval vessel that disappeared on Sunday with 29 people on board during an evacuation mission ahead of the storm was found with its occupants all “safe and sound,” officials said.
Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega had ordered the ship to remove people from flood-prone coastal areas, but contact was lost after four sailors had picked up 25 indigenous Miskito fishermen, the military said.
The country’s civil defense chief, Lieutenant Colonel Freddy Herrera, told reporters that a shrimping boat was trawling when it chanced upon the missing navy boat and notified the authorities, who had been looking for it for two days.
The naval vessel was one of three ships dispatched on Sunday by Ortega to help evacuate Miskito residents from Sandy Bay, a coastal town north of the provincial capital Bilwi.
Central America is still struggling to recover from recent torrential rains that triggered deadly flooding and landslides, swamped huge swathes of farmland and caused hundreds of millions of dollars in damage.
More than 120 people across the region were killed, including 39 in Guatemala, 34 in El Salvador, 29 in Honduras, 16 in Nicaragua and five in Costa Rica.
Rina is the sixth hurricane and 17th named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season, which runs from June 1 to Nov. 30. After passing near or over Mexico, it is forecast to weaken as it spins toward Cuba and Florida.
Nauru has started selling passports to fund climate action, but is so far struggling to attract new citizens to the low-lying, largely barren island in the Pacific Ocean. Nauru, one of the world’s smallest nations, has a novel plan to fund its fight against climate change by selling so-called “Golden Passports.” Selling for US$105,000 each, Nauru plans to drum up more than US$5 million in the first year of the “climate resilience citizenship” program. Almost six months after the scheme opened in February, Nauru has so far approved just six applications — covering two families and four individuals. Despite the slow start —
YELLOW SHIRTS: Many protesters were associated with pro-royalist groups that had previously supported the ouster of Paetongtarn’s father, Thaksin, in 2006 Protesters rallied on Saturday in the Thai capital to demand the resignation of court-suspended Thai Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra and in support of the armed forces following a violent border dispute with Cambodia that killed more than three dozen people and displaced more than 260,000. Gathered at Bangkok’s Victory Monument despite soaring temperatures, many sang patriotic songs and listened to speeches denouncing Paetongtarn and her father, former Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, and voiced their backing of the country’s army, which has always retained substantial power in the Southeast Asian country. Police said there were about 2,000 protesters by mid-afternoon, although
MOGAMI-CLASS FRIGATES: The deal is a ‘big step toward elevating national security cooperation with Australia, which is our special strategic partner,’ a Japanese official said Australia is to upgrade its navy with 11 Mogami-class frigates built by Japan’s Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Australian Minister for Defence Richard Marles said yesterday. Billed as Japan’s biggest defense export deal since World War II, Australia is to pay US$6 billion over the next 10 years to acquire the fleet of stealth frigates. Australia is in the midst of a major military restructure, bolstering its navy with long-range firepower in an effort to deter China. It is striving to expand its fleet of major warships from 11 to 26 over the next decade. “This is clearly the biggest defense-industry agreement that has ever
DEADLY TASTE TEST: Erin Patterson tried to kill her estranged husband three times, police said in one of the major claims not heard during her initial trial Australia’s recently convicted mushroom murderer also tried to poison her husband with bolognese pasta and chicken korma curry, according to testimony aired yesterday after a suppression order lapsed. Home cook Erin Patterson was found guilty last month of murdering her husband’s parents and elderly aunt in 2023, lacing their beef Wellington lunch with lethal death cap mushrooms. A series of potentially damning allegations about Patterson’s behavior in the lead-up to the meal were withheld from the jury to give the mother-of-two a fair trial. Supreme Court Justice Christopher Beale yesterday rejected an application to keep these allegations secret. Patterson tried to kill her