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Hurricane Paula weakens en route to Cuba

HURRICANE Paula shrank and weakened yesterday as it headed for western Cuba on a path toward the communist-led island's crumbling capital.

The US National Hurricane Center said it had dropped to a minimal Category 1 hurricane on the five-step Saffir-Simpson scale of intensity, with top winds of 140 kph per hour that extended just 20 km from the eye.

Its center was about 70 km west of Cuba's westernmost province, Pinar del Rio, where landfall was expected late yesterday or early today as the storm moved north-northeast at 7 kph.

Earlier in the day, Paula, the 16th named storm of the busy 2010 Atlantic season and the ninth hurricane, grazed Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula but inflicted little damage to the tourist resorts on the country's Caribbean coast.

The hurricane did not affect any of Mexico's main offshore oil-producing regions in the Gulf of Mexico and was not expected to move into the US oil and gas fields in the Gulf.

The Miami-based hurricane center said it was on a path to hit Havana by early on Friday and posted tropical storm warnings for the city where high winds and heavy rains routinely topple decaying buildings.

Cuba suffers few deaths from hurricanes because evacuations are mandatory and efficiently executed.

Cuba still has not fully recovered from three powerful hurricanes that struck in 2008, causing $10 billion in damage and dealing a serious blow to the country's fragile economy.

Paula was not expected to be nearly as damaging. The hurricane center called it a "small hurricane."

HEAVY RAINS

A tropical storm watch also was issued for part of the Florida Keys, 145 km north of Cuba, reflecting forecasters' uncertainty about where the storm will go.

Officials in Pinar del Rio warned residents to remain alert, but there was no word yet on evacuations.

Cuba's weather service said heavy rains were beginning to sweep across the area and winds up to 61 kph.

Officials said freshly planted fields of the province's prized tobacco, from which world-famous Cuban cigars are made, had been covered and leaves from the previous harvest safely stored.

Cuban television said the local banana harvest had been speeded up and livestock moved to safe areas. Pinar del Rio is not a big sugar-producing region on the island.

The hurricane center said the storm could dump 7.5 to 15 cm of rain, with up to 25 cm possible.

Paula spared Central America's coffee-growing region, battered this year by heavy rains.



 

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