Hurricane Paloma strengthens, heads for Cuba

Hurricane Paloma strengthened into an "extremely dangerous" Category 4 storm today as it pounded the Cayman Islands and headed…

Hurricane Paloma strengthened into an "extremely dangerous" Category 4 storm today as it pounded the Cayman Islands and headed toward storm-battered Cuba.

Paloma's eye passed just to the east of Grand Cayman, the main island and home to 50,000 people, but damage appeared to be light and there were no immediate reports of deaths.

"There is no damage to central George Town, where the bulk of the financial sector is located," said Cindy Scotland, an official with the Cayman Islands Monetary Authority. "So there is no reason to think there has been any damage in any way to the infrastructure of the financial services sector."

"The Authority does not expect any reports of significant, if any, interruptions in business," she said.

READ MORE

Cuba, already hammered this year by hurricanes Gustav and Ike, declared an emergency in central and eastern parts of the island, canceled all national air and ground transportation and began evacuating hundreds of thousands of residents.

Authorities issued an "all-clear" early today for Grand Cayman but cautioned residents to move about carefully. Power was out in some parts of the island and the streets of George Town were littered with tree branches.

Paloma's sustained winds increased to 140 miles per hour early this morning as the storm hurtled across the group's smaller islands, Cayman Brac, home to 1,800 people, and Little Cayman, with a population of about 100.

Governor Stuart Jack asked that the British auxiliary ship Wave Ruler head straight to the smaller islands after the storm passes.

"Paloma is now an extremely dangerous category four hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson scale," the US National Hurricane Center said.

Category 4 hurricanes can generate tidal surges up to 18 feet above normal and their winds can tear off the roofs and blow out the doors and windows of small homes.

Hurricane Ivan had 160 mph winds when it slammed the Caymans in 2004, causing extensive damage. But the islands and their solid structures are considered less vulnerable than other Caribbean islands to the fierce tropical storms that churn through between June and the end of November each year.

Paloma doused Honduras with heavy rains as it formed on Thursday, adding to misery in the impoverished Central American country where the United Nations estimates 70,000 people have been made homeless by recent storms. It posed no threat to US oil installations in the Gulf of Mexico.

In Cuba, Paloma was forecast to beat a northeast path through central Camaguey and eastern Las Tunas provinces. It was expected to weaken before hitting Cuba as a Category 3 storm, the forecasters said.

Reuters