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Gustav kills 23; New Orleans makes evacuation plan
By JONATHAN M. KATZ
(YAHOO)
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PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - Gustav stalled offshore Wednesday and poured
more misery onto Haiti after landslides and flooding killed 23 people.
Oil workers began leaving their rigs and New Orleans drew up evacuation
plans as forecasters warned the storm could plow into the U.S. Gulf
coast as a major hurricane.
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Gustav killed 15 people on Haiti's deforested southern peninsula,
where it dumped 12 inches or more of rain. A landslide buried eight
people, including a mother and six of her children, in the neighboring
Dominican Republic.
Gustav weakened to a tropical storm over Haiti, but was expected
to become a hurricane again as early as Thursday over the warm Caribbean
waters between Cuba and Jamaica. Its expected track pointed directly
at the Cayman Islands, an offshore banking center where residents
boarded up homes and stocked up on emergency supplies.
By Labor Day, Gustav could make landfall anywhere from south Texas
to the Florida panhandle, and hurricane experts said everyone in
between should be concerned.
"We know it's going to head into the Gulf. After that, we're
not sure," said meteorologist Rebecca Waddington at the National
Hurricane Center in Miami. "For that reason, everyone in the
Gulf needs to be monitoring the storm."
New Orleans began planning a possible mandatory evacuation, hoping
to prevent the chaos it saw after Hurricane Katrina struck three
years ago Friday. Mayor Ray Nagin left the Democratic National Convention
in Denver to help the city prepare.
Oil prices spiked more than $2 to close above $118 a barrel, rising
for a third day on fears that Gustav like Katrina and Rita
could damage the Gulf Coast energy infrastructure, home to
15 percent of the nation's natural gas output, a quarter of its
oil production and nearly half its refining capacity.
Royal Dutch Shell PLC said it was evacuating 300 people from rigs
Wednesday, and other producers were doing the same. Transocean Inc.,
the world's largest offshore drilling contractor, said all 11 of
its Gulf rigs were pulling up and securing drill pipe and other
underwater equipment as a precaution.
Any damage to the oil infrastructure could send U.S. pump prices
spiking, possibly before the busy Labor Day weekend.
"A bad storm churning in the Gulf could be a nightmare scenario,"
said Phil Flynn, an analyst at Alaron Trading Corp. in Chicago.
"We might see oil prices spike $5 to $8 if it really rips into
platforms."
Gustav is particularly worrisome because there are few surrounding
wind currents capable of shearing off the top of the storm and diminishing
its power, the hurricane center said. "Combined with the deep
warm waters, rapid intensification could occur in a couple of days."
By Wednesday evening, a slightly weakened Gustav had top winds
of 45 mph. It was centered some 65 miles south of Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba, and traveling west at 7 mph.
A hurricane warning was in effect for parts of Cuba, including
the U.S. military base at Guantanamo, where base spokesman Bruce
Lloyd predicted "a really wet night."
Nearly 30,000 people were evacuated from low-lying areas in eastern
Cuba, and state television showed muddy, waist-high water damaging
homes. Fidel Castro pledged in an essay that "no one will be
forgotten."
The Cayman Islands ordered citizens to secure loose materials in
their yards to prevent them from becoming missiles in high winds,
and told them to stock up on food, medicine and fuel for generators.
In the Haitian capital, chocolate waters spilled over riverbanks
and into shacks of the Cite Soleil slum. Residents pushed bicycles
and balanced boxes of belongings on their heads as they sought higher
ground.
U.N. peacekeepers said they evacuated thousands of Haitians by
boat and truck, and were preparing to pull people out of the western
town of Jeremie even as rain continued to fall. Civil protection
director Marie Alta Jean-Baptiste said a young girl swept off a
bridge by flood waters was among 15 people killed in Haiti.
In the Dominican Republic, a mother's screams and the roar of falling
earth jolted a Santo Domingo shantytown from its sleep Tuesday.
Marcelina Feliz and six of her seven children ranging in
age from 11 months to 15 years were killed when a landslide
crushed their tin-roofed house.
Feliz, 32, was found hugging the body of her smallest child, rescue
officials said. A neighbor was also killed.
"I don't know how I can live now, because none of my family
is left," said Marino Borges, Feliz's husband and father of
several of her children.
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