close

Hurricane Isidore batters Yucatan Peninsula

4 min read

MERIDA, Mexico (AP) – Hurricane Isidore peeled rooftops off homes and snapped trees in an area scattered with colonial cities, Mayan ruins and nature reserves before weakening to a tropical storm and stalling Monday over the Yucatan Peninsula. With communications down across the peninsula, Yucatan Gov. Patricio Patron reported at least two dead.

Forecasters predicted the storm would turn west later Monday and head back out over water, where it would likely gain strength before hitting land again as a hurricane somewhere along the Texas or Louisiana coastline.

Isidore was downgraded to a tropical storm as it moved inland over the Yucatan, tossing uprooted trees onto Merida’s famous Paseo de Montejo, which normally features tourists riding horse-drawn carriages.

The storm pounded the region’s ecological reserves and scattered ruins – including the Mayan city of Chichen Itza – with rain and high winds. It was unclear what damage the popular tourist spots suffered. Downed power and telephone lines cut off communication to much of the region.

Patron said one person was electrocuted in Merida by downed power lines, while a second was killed in a storm-related car crash on a highway outside the city.

By Monday afternoon, the storm had stalled 55 miles south of Merida. It was expected to dump 10 to 15 more inches of rain on already inundated areas.

Waves battered Mexico’s southern coast, pushing boats up onto land. Mexico’s state oil monopoly, Petroleos Mexicanos, evacuated more than 8,000 workers from drilling platforms in the Gulf of Mexico, leaving skeleton crews aboard as the storm prepared to move out over the Gulf.

The hurricane caused heavy flooding in western Cuba over the weekend, then sheered the Yucatan shore Sunday with 125 mph winds and powerful waves.

It veered suddenly inland in the late afternoon. While its center barely avoided Merida, Yucatan’s state capital with 800,000 residents, winds and sheets of rain shattered windows, downed trees and power lines and collapsed the balconies of elegant old houses.

A light, steady rain fell Monday on the city’s historical plaza, covered by a tangle of fallen branches. One family snapped a photo of their 2-year-old daughter in front of an uprooted tree, while dozens of other stranded visitors searched for a way to get home.

Richard Syrop, a 22-year-old manager at a health food store in Tucson, Ariz., wandered Merida’s streets looking for a ride to the airport after waiting out the storm in his hotel.

“None of the taxis are working and none of the buses are working as far as we know,” he said. “We just walked around for about an hour, trying to find a way to get to the airport.”

Residents begged for food at temporary shelters set up by soldiers in schools, which were canceled throughout the state. At one of the few stores in Merida that wasn’t shuttered, a dozen people grabbed armloads of cupcakes and water bottles off shelves.

Even as the storm continued to batter the peninsula, some began the long task of rebuilding. Twenty miles northeast of Merida, residents in the hard-hit town of Motul swept mud and water from their homes.

“Nothing is left,” said Maria Eleana Dizib, gazing at her empty, concrete-block home, which like many others was flooded and roofless. “Everything flew away.”

In the resort city of Cancun, 150 miles to the east, rain and winds ruined beach vacations, but no major damage or injuries were reported.

“Everybody is shut up in their rooms,” said Eduardo Cortez, at the reception desk of a Cancun hotel. “There is nobody around.”

In Cuba, no hurricane-related deaths or injuries were reported after floodwaters receded Monday.

The high winds and heavy rains Sunday knocked out telephone service across parts of the region and 170 linemen began working Sunday to restore communications.

Tropical Storm Lili grew from a tropical depression Monday, assaulting Barbados with winds that tore the roofs off at least 15 homes. One person was reported injured.

Lili had sustained winds near 60 mph and higher gusts, said Jack Beven, a hurricane specialist at the National Hurricane Center in Miami. A tropical depression becomes a storm when sustained winds reach 39 mph.

Tropical storm-force winds extended up to 105 miles from Lili’s center.

At noon EDT, Lili was moving away from Barbados and was about 70 miles east of the Grenadines, moving west-northwest at about 20 mph. Forecasters expected little change in Lili’s strength during the day.

A tropical storm warning was issued from St. Lucia south to Grenada and east to Barbados. A tropical storm watch remained in effect from Guadeloupe south to Martinique.

On the Net:

National Hurricane Center: http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/

CUSTOMER LOGIN

If you have an account and are registered for online access, sign in with your email address and password below.

NEW CUSTOMERS/UNREGISTERED ACCOUNTS

Never been a subscriber and want to subscribe, click the Subscribe button below.

Starting at $4.79/week.

Subscribe Today