Hurricane Gonzalo made a direct hit on
Bermuda as a strong category two storm, knocking down trees, damaging a
hospital and plunging most of the island's terrified residents into the
dark.
Gonzalo, which had already killed one
person and caused property damage in the Caribbean, buffeted the British
overseas territory in the Atlantic with maximum sustained winds of 110
miles per hour, forecasters said. By 0900 GMT Saturday, Gonzalo had torn
its way over Bermuda and was about 190 miles northeast of the island --
home to about 65,000 people -- and moving quickly away, the Miami-based
National Hurricane Center (NHC) said in its latest forecast,
downgrading it to a tropical storm.
The island's only newspaper, The Royal Gazette, reported that 31,200 homes -- or a majority of Bermudians -- were without power.
Flooding and storm surges were reported
all around the island, trees were down across many roads and the main
hospital had suffered damage to its roof, the report said.
Holidaymakers and residents said they
were praying for the best, with the full extent of the destruction yet
to become clear. Sharon Scott, writing on Twitter, said:
The morning after the night before! We
made it! No idea about our boats. Can't go out yet, roads impassable.
Hope all in Bermuda are safe.
The storm was forecast to pass near the
coast of Newfoundland, on Canada's eastern coast, tonight and early
tomorrow. Forecasters were also warily eyeing Tropical Storm Trudy,
which was intensifying quickly, prompting Mexican authorities to issue a
hurricane watch from east of Acapulco to Lagunas de Chacahua.
And there was also Hurricane Ana, the
center of which was predicted to pass about 150 miles southwest of
Hawaii's Big Island, triggering heavy downpours. Gonzalo caused
widespread disruption in affluent Bermuda as it closed in.
Schools, businesses, grocery stores and
government offices all closed early, and many people boarded up the
windows of their homes and placed sandbags outside in preparation.
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