Tropical
Storm Olga kills at least eight in Caribbean
SANTO
DOMINGO
Petroleumworld.com
13 12 07
Tropical Storm Olga, a rare December cyclone,
left eight people dead in the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico on Wednesday
as pounding rains triggered major floods and landslides.
In the Dominican Republic, rescuers found numerous people clinging to trees or
perched on their rooftops as floodwaters rose, according to the governor of Santiago
province, Jose Izquierdo.
The northern city of Santiago, the country's second largest, was the worst hit,
after floodwaters breached a dam early Wednesday morning.
"Officially there are seven people dead in this city and 24,500 people displaced
by evacuations across the country, because of rivers bursting their banks and
landslides, said Juan Manuel Mendez, who heads the Emergency Operations Center.
In addition, dozens of communities were cut off from the rest of the country,
he said.
"We are facing a very difficult situation," said provincial senator
Francisco Dominguez Brito.
In Puerto Rico, one man was killed when his car was buried under a landslide
near San Juan, police said.
In Haiti, which shares the island of Hispaniola with the Dominican Republic,
officials said the storm left serious damage, though there were no immediate
reports of fatalities.
Olga slammed the Caribbean country on Tuesday, almost two weeks after the Atlantic
hurricane season officially ended.
The storm weakened on Wednesday as it swirled over open water, but it continued
to dump rain that could cause more "life-threatening flash floods and mud
slides in Hispaniola," the Miami-based National Hurricane Center said.
At 1500 GMT Wednesday, maximum sustained winds were recorded at 64 kilometers
(40 miles) and the center of the storm was 120 kilometers (75 miles) south of
Guantanamo, Cuba.
The six-month Atlantic hurricane season officially ended on November 30, and
it is rare for tropical storms to form after that.
The Dominican Republic already had been hit hard by Tropical Storm Noel, which
slammed the country in late October, killing at least 85 people.
Olga is the 15th named storm to form in the Atlantic this year. In all six of
the storms became hurricanes, including two that hit land with rare fury, reaching
the topmost intensity five with maximum sustained winds of more than 249 kilometers
(155 miles) per hour.
In August, Hurricane Dean killed at least 29 people in a rampage through the
Caribbean and Mexico. The following month, Hurricane Felix killed about 150 people
and wrought a trail of devastation along Nicaragua's impoverished Caribbean coast.
Story
from AFP 12 1825 GMT 12 07
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