Saturday, February 20, 2016

Tropical Cyclone Winston is strongest ever to hit Fiji

February 20,2016; 9:18PM,EST
 
 
Fiji took a direct hit by Tropical Cyclone Winston, the strongest tropical cyclone to strike the island nation.
Winston remains the equivalent of an extremely dangerous Category 5 hurricane in the eastern Pacific or Atlantic basins or a super typhoon in the western Pacific Ocean.
According to a blog by New Zealand MetService, "Winston is now the strongest tropical cyclone and the first Category 5 [in the Southern Hemisphere] tropical cyclone on record to hit Fiji."
The cyclone made landfall about 6:30 p.m. local time on Saturday near Nasau on Fiji's main island of Viti Levu.

This satellite loop of Winston is courtesy of NOAA
Prior to striking Viti Levu, 1-minute maximum sustained winds of Winston were estimated by the Joint Typhoon Warning Center to be nearly 300 km/h (185 mph) as the cyclone passed by just south of Taveuni Island.
As Winston continues to pull away from Fiji, conditions will improve and the nation can begin to clean up the destruction left by the dangerous tropical cyclone.
On Sunday, Winston will be just west of the main island of Fiji, before making a southward turn early next week. Once Winston makes a southward turn, weakening is expected.
The New Zealand Herald reports that one man died in Fiji after a home collapsed on him.
Fiji Broadcasting Corporation reported that the town of Savusavu was "badly damaged" by Winston. Damage includes to yachts, electric poles and homes. A bus was washed inland.
Sustained winds, averaged over a period of 10 minutes, of 230 km/h (nearly 145 mph) were reported on Vanua Balavu island from the passage of Winston.
RELATED:
Fiji satellite
AccuWeather tropical cyclone center
Fiji weather map

A countrywide curfew went into effect at 6 p.m. local time on Saturday, the Fijian government said. It also issued a 30-day State of Disaster for the country.
The government opened more than 900 evacuation shelters in the country's Central and Northern divisions as part of its response.
The Fiji Sun reported that air travel in the country has already been affected, with airlines waiving fees for affected travelers. Nadi International Airport had all flights cancelled and aircraft were taken to secure places.
According to the Fijian Government, the Land Transport Authority requested that all public transportation stop operations at 5 p.m. local time on Saturday across the county's Central Division. The government also urged residents against any unnecessary travel throughout the country due to the impacts of the storm.
Earlier this week, the cyclone caused severe damage to houses and crops in neighboring Tonga, with 70 to 80 percent of crops being destroyed in the northern islands, CARE Australia said.
AccuWeather Senior Meteorologists Bob Smerbeck and Kristina Pydynowski along with staff writers Kevin Byrne and Mark Leberfinger contributed content to this article.
 

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