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Ida not directly behind deadly Salvador floods: experts

Ida weakens as it hits US Gulf Coast
New Orleans, Louisiana (AFP) Nov 10, 2009 - Weakened remnants of what was once Hurricane Ida made landfall on the US Gulf coast Tuesday, dumping heavy rain and triggering some flooding but without the deadly winds Ida packed over the weekend. Ida was a category two hurricane on the five-level Saffir-Simpson scale on Sunday, but lost strength as it moved north from the Caribbean - and by 1500 GMT Tuesday the Miami-based National Hurricane Center said it had become a tropical depression and canceled all storm warnings. The storm however remains dangerous: it is forecast to dump up to eight inches (20 centimeters) of rain across the southeastern United States, and area officials were preparing for floods and damage caused by the ocean surge. Ida made landfall as a tropical storm at 1140 GMT on Dauphin Island, Alabama, packing wind gusts of 45 miles per hour (75 kilometers per hour). Fewer than four hours later its winds had decreased to around 35 miles per hour (55 kilometers per hour).

"Ida has lost tropical characteristics and its winds are expected to slowly diminish during the next day or so," the NHC said. At 1500 GMT the center of Ida was located about 30 miles (50 kilometers) southeast of Mobile, Alabama, moving toward the northeast at nine miles (15 kilometers) per hour. Through Wednesday, Ida "is expected to produce total rain accumulations of three to six inches (eight to 15 centimeters)," with some areas receiving up to eight inches (20 centimeters), the NHC warned. In Louisiana, where memories of the devastating 2005 Hurricane Katrina are still fresh, Governor Bobby Jindal urged residents to be prepared. "We urge people to take precautions and watch their children," Jindal said in a late Monday press conference. The US Army Corps of Engineers is "confident" that the vast network of levees, pumps and drainage canals will protect New Orleans from serious flooding, Jindal said.

Officials offered sandbags to residents in flood-prone areas, and announced "voluntary evacuations" for low-lying areas outside the city's levee protection system. In Alabama, the storm left some 3,000 people without electricity in the Mobile area on Tuesday. Local officials said that flooding was the main concern, as the ground was saturated due to heavy rain in recent weeks. This year, the Pacific's El Nino ocean-warming phenomenon resulted in an especially calm Atlantic hurricane season - a welcome respite for Caribbean and southeastern US residents still smarting from a 2008 pounding. There have only been two other hurricanes in the 2009 Atlantic season, which runs from June 1 to November 30. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Staff Writers
Miami (AFP) Nov 10, 2009
Hurricane Ida was not directly responsible for the weekend floods and landslides that killed at least 140 people in El Salvador, even though it lashed parts of Central America with rain, meteorologists said Tuesday.

Ida, which fizzled into a tropical depression Tuesday as it reached the US Gulf coast, was a category two hurricane storm when it struck eastern Central America and churned towards Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula Sunday.

But as Ida was slamming Nicaragua and Honduras "there was another system coming from the eastern Pacific" spreading "very heavy rains over the western El Salvador," said Dennis Feltgen, a meteorologist and spokesman with the Miami-based National Hurricane Center.

"Hurricane Ida was not directly responsible for the grave situation in El Salvador," Feltgen said.

In El Salvador, meteorologist Walter Vanegas also blamed the Pacific system, but did not fully absolve Ida.

"The rain... was caused by a low pressure system that was semi-parked southwest of El Salvador over the Pacific," said Vanegas.

"But the remnants of clouds left by Hurricane Ida in the region influenced the situation by adding humidity," Vanegas said.

The Pacific weather system combined with the humid remnants of Ida were concentrated over the areas of heaviest rain, he said.

earlier related report
Floods, landslides kill 144 in El Salvador
San Salvador (AFP) Nov 10, 2009 - Rescue workers in El Salvador on Tuesday tried to reach dozens of towns cut off by torrents of mud and debris unleashed by devastating late-season storms that killed at least 144 people.

The total number of dead rose to 144, civil protection authorities said after landslides and overflowing rivers swept away homes, while a raging torrent ripped through part of the town of Verapaz, where bodies -- covered in mud-caked sheets -- were stored in a local chapel, waiting to be identified.

Rescue efforts focused on the eastern San Vicente department, where 72 people were still missing after three days of driving rain, 60 of them in Verapaz alone, officials said late Monday.

"The problem here in finding bodies is removing all these rocks and trees," Carlos Arce, 27, told AFP in what remained of his town of 6,800 after the storm.

"The floods took away people, houses and destroyed the crops," said Javier Martinez, a local farmer.

The number of people seeking emergency shelter dropped slightly to 12,930, a civil protection official said, while 1,800 homes were damaged or destroyed and 18 bridges and many roads were washed away by the floods.

The devastation was initially blamed on Hurricane Ida, which did not hit the country of some seven million people directly but brought heavy rain that affected the entire region.

Meterologists on Tuesday said however that Ida was not solely to blame.

As Ida was slamming Nicaragua and Honduras "there was another system coming from the eastern Pacific" spreading "very heavy rains over the western El Salvador," said Dennis Feltgen, a meteorologist and spokesman with the Miami-based National Hurricane Center.

"Hurricane Ida was not directly responsible for the grave situation in El Salvador," Feltgen said.

In El Salvador, meteorologist Walter Vanegas also blamed the Pacific system, but did not fully absolve Ida.

"The rain... was caused by a low pressure system that was semi-parked southwest of El Salvador over the Pacific," said Vanegas.

"But the remnants of clouds left by Hurricane Ida in the region influenced the situation by adding humidity," Vanegas said.

President Mauricio Funes visited Verapaz, where he vowed that "this time, the government will not leave the people alone."

He has requested the national assembly reallocate 150 million dollars from an international loan of 300 million designed for anti-crisis measures.

The National Assembly has declared a "public catastrophe and national disaster" and decreed three days of national mourning for the flood victims.

"There is no doubt that this is a town that has been severely hit by a natural disaster, but it also shows the lack of preventive measures and risk mitigation that could have been carried out years ago," said Funes.

"We must overcome the tragedy ... I know that those lives lost simply cannot be replaced."

Help for the flood victims was coming from across the Americas: the United States has donated 100,000 dollars in aid, Brazil 80,000 dollars, and Guatemala has sent rescue workers to help the recovery effort.

The UN World Food Program warned that over the next few days around 10,000 people in El Salvador will need emergency food assistance.

Teams would shortly begin the challenging work in this hilly and mountainous land of evaluating the flood damage, according to Interior Minister Humberto Centeno.

Ida, now weakened to a tropical depression, made landfall in Alabama early Tuesday, lashing the southeastern United States from Louisiana to Florida with winds and rain.

Torrential rains have also hit neighboring Mexico, Honduras and Guatemala.

No victims or major damage have been reported either in Honduras or Mexico, but about 100 homes have been damaged by flooding in Guatemala, prompting the evacuation of at least 200 people there.

Ida also struck neighboring Nicaragua last week, destroying around 930 homes and leaving some 13,000 people homeless.

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Rain and Mud Kill 124 In El Salvador As Ida Moves Into Gulf Of Mexico
San Salvador (AFP) Nov 8, 2009
A late-season hurricane ravaged parts of Central America Sunday as floods and landslides killed at least 91 in El Salvador and thousands were left homeless in Nicaragua. Hurricane Ida, which grew to a category two storm Sunday, was moving into the southern Gulf of Mexico but local officials said it had caused no casualties or damage to infrastructure in the popular tourist resort city of Can ... read more







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