Ada Carr
Published: November 23,2016
Three deaths were blamed on Otto as
the storm moved toward Central America Tuesday, and officials were
taking no chances with the storm strengthening as it inched closer to
landfall.
A national emergency was declared
in Costa Rica as the nation prepared for the storm, according to the
French Press Agency. Costa Rica ordered the evacuation of 4,000 people
from its Caribbean coast ahead of the storm. The effort was expected to
involve planes, boats and roads in the low-lying coastal areas.
Civil
defense officials in Panama said Tuesday that two people died in
landslides and a child was killed when a tree collapsed on top of a car
outside a school in Panama City. The deaths occurred before Otto
strengthened to a hurricane.
(MORE: Check the Forecast for Otto)
Panama's
civil defense director Jose Donderis said the landslide occurred just
west of Panama City and trapped nine people. Seven people were rescued.
Nicaragua
ordered evacuations in low-lying areas of its sparsely populated
Caribbean coast, an order that could cover about 7,000 people, the
Associated Press reported.
Costa Rican president Luis Guillermo Solis said Otto could damage the country's coffee and agriculture sectors.
Panama
announced Tuesday that it would be canceling classes and releasing
water from locks and lakes feeding into the Panama Canal.
No comments:
Post a Comment