San Juan, Puerto Rico – External gangs for Hurricane Hamberto Bermuda was criticized on Tuesday when he approached small British lands, with a recent formation Hurricane Emilda Follow up closely behind.
The hurricane warning was valid for the island in the northern Atlantic Ocean, where the predictors advised the dangerous seas, strong winds and heavy rains.
Hamebero is about 300 miles (485 km) west of Bermuda. The storm of the first category was the maximum sustainable wind of 80 miles per hour (130 km per hour) and was moving northwest of the northwest at an altitude of 18 miles per hour (30 km per hour), according to the National Hurricane Center in Miami.
Hamberto was a 4 -Series Storm on Monday, but it was quickly losing power and was expected to dissipate by Wednesday.
Hamberto was expected to pass well in the west and north of Bermuda on Tuesday and Wednesday, while Emilda was expected to pass near the island or after the island late on Wednesday as a hurricane of Series 2, according to the weather service in Bermuda.
“I cannot exaggerate the seriousness of this threat,” said Michael Wix, Minister of National Security in Bermuda. “This is not, I must confirm, transient.”
He said that Bermuda will bear a sustainable wind for the hurricane for a period of up to six hours, starting late on Wednesday.
Weeks announced at a press conference that Al -Jazeera International Airport will close on Wednesday, as well as schools and government offices.
He said that the residents should be all stormy preparations, which were completed by noon on Wednesday.
He said: “Emilda has the ability to damage our island and disrupt it significantly.”
IMELDA is about 690 miles (1115 km) west southwest of Bermuda. She had the maximum sustainable wind 85 miles per hour (140 km per hour) and was moving east in the north at a speed of 12 miles per hour (19 km per hour).
“The regime is likely to be somewhat strong while passing near Bermuda,” said the National Hurricane Center.
Bermuda is a rich British region with strong concrete structures capable of dangerous storms.
Hameberto is expected to fall up to 2 inches (5 centimeters) of rain on Bermuda and Emela to 4 inches (10 centimeters).
Emilda is also launching the coastal area in southeast of North Carolina, with rain that predictable experts may lead to flash and urban floods.
Meanwhile, Hamberto and Emilda were generating serious inflation affecting the Northern Caribbean, the Bahamas, Bermuda and many of the American East Coast.
“Both storms that pass through the Atlantic Ocean produce dangerous RIP currents and browse harsh waves. Beaches from Florida to New Jersey may have dangerous conditions during the weekend.” Alex Dasselva, the main hurricane expert of Accoweather, a private weather forecast company in the United States, said.
Earlier this week, I hit Emilda, east of Cuba, Two people were killed, According to Prime Minister Manuel Mariro.
Ali X said that the two victims died in the province of Santiago de Cuba, but he did not give any details.
Earlier, government media reported that 60 -year -old Luis Mario Perez died in Santiago de Cuba after the landslides in that area.
Floods and landslides have cut 17 society in that province, affecting more than 24,000 people living there, according to the official Granma.
Meanwhile, more than 18,000 people were evacuated in Guantenamo County, according to reports from the country’s Caribbean channel.
In Haiti, one woman lost after an attempt to cross a swollen river and two others were wounded after the heavy rains of Emilda in the country, which led to the dumping of about 35 society, according to the Civil Protection Agency in the country. IMELDA has also caused great destruction of crops in a country that was expected to test more than half of its population about 12 million people Extreme hunger During the first half of the year.
IMELDA also immersed parts of the Bahamas on Monday, when New Providence hit. More than ten public schools on that island and on Grand Bahma and Abaco remained closed on Tuesday.
Prime Minister Philip Davis said: “After a seriousness.” “The flood water is still.”
IMELDA is strengthening to a hurricane on Tuesday, to become Hurricane the fourth Atlantic season this year.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predicted a higher season than the storm from 13 to 18 storm. Among them, five to nine hurricanes are expected to become, including two to five main hurricanes, which packaged winds of 111 miles per hour or more.
The Atlantic Hurricane season lasts from June 1 to November 30.