KEY WEST, Fla.(AP)
"Extremely dangerous" Hurricane Ike grew to fierce
Category 4 strength Saturday as it roared on an uncertain path that
forced millions from the Caribbean to Florida, and Louisiana to
Mexico, to nervously wonder where it would eventually strike.
Preparations stretched more than 1,000 miles as the massive,
135-mph storm took a southwesterly shift that could send it over
Cuba and the Florida Keys by Tuesday before heading into the warm
open waters of the Gulf of Mexico. And once again, a possible
target was New Orleans and the already storm-weary U.S. Gulf
Coast.
"These storms have a mind of their own," Florida Gov.
Charlie Crist said after a meeting with mayors and emergency
officials. "There are no rules, so what we have to do is be
prepared, be smart, vigilant and alert."
First in Ike's path was the low-lying British territory of
Turks and Caicos, already pummeled for four days this week by
Tropical Storm Hanna. At the airport in Providenciales, Patrick
Munroe had hoped to catch a departing flight, but was turned away,
even before the airport shuttered.
"It looks really, really serious," he said. "And
I think it's going to be devastating."
In Haiti, authorities tried to move thousands of people into
shelters ahead of Ike, still struggling to recover from Tropical
Storm Hanna. Rescue workers feared Hanna's death toll could
rise into the hundreds in the flooded city of Gonaives and that aid
efforts could be further impeded as Ike approached.
Hanna did not pack the same punch Saturday while racing up the
U.S. Eastern seaboard, but it did cause one death in a traffic
accident on Interstate 95 in Maryland. It also brought fits of wind
and pelting rain all along its trek toward New England.
But Ike is another matter.
Tens of millions of people in countries spread over a swath of
the hurricane zone monitored the trajectory of a storm that had a
huge footprint, with tropical storm-force winds stretching up to
140 miles from its eye.
At 8 p.m. EDT, Ike's center was located about 60 miles east
of Grand Turk Island as the storm moved west-southwest at about 15
mph, the National Hurricane Center in Miami said.
The center said Ike remained a Category 4 storm with sustained
winds of about 135 mph and gusts even higher.
Center meteorologist Colin McAdie said the core of Ike was
expected to pass "near or over" the Turks and Caicos soon
and begin to affect the southeastern Bahamas overnight.
"It's a very dangerous storm," McAdie told The
Associated Press from Miami. He added all indications were that Ike
would remain a powerful storm.
"There's going to be some ups and downs, but we expect
it to remain a major hurricane over the next couple days," he
added.
Tourists were urged to leave the Bahamas, and authorities in the
Dominican Republic began evacuating dozens of families from river
banks that could flood with waters from two already overfilled
dams.
In Cuba, the island's top meteorologist warned Ike was a
"true danger" and government officials began the early
phases of emergency preparations. But no alarm was evident in
Havana, where the U.S. soccer team was set to play Cuba in a World
Cup qualifying match.
In Louisiana, still recovering from last week's Hurricane
Gustav, Gov. Bobby Jindal set up a task force to prepare for the
possibility of more havoc.
"We're not hoping for another strike, another storm,
but we're ready," he said.
Even as Gustav evacuees headed home, New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin
said officials were anxiously monitoring Ike's projected path
toward the Gulf.
"Our citizens are weary and they're tired and they have
spent a lot of money evacuating .. from Gustav," he said. He
added that if Ike were to threaten, "my expectations this time
is, it will be very difficult to move the kind of numbers out of
this city that we moved during Gustav."
In Florida, batteries, water and gas cans became major
commodities, as nearly the entire state appeared within the cone of
areas that might be hit.
Jose Calbo planned to fly to Chicago later Saturday with his
girlfriend, leaving his Miami-area home behind.
"Why be here without power and lights?" he asked.
"There is nothing you can do. The best thing you can hope for
is to board up the house, empty the freezer."
Visitors to the Florida Keys were under a mandatory evacuation
order Saturday and a light but steady stream of traffic rolled out
of Key West. In typical fashion, laid-back residents and business
owners kept their shops, bars and restaurants open. But unique was
the worry, still nearly four days ahead of potential landfall.
Jesse Damian hammered plywood over windows at The Bike Shop.
"The owners are usually like all the people who wait until
the last minute around here," he said. "But this
one's looking pretty bad."
Key West was last seriously affected by a hurricane in 2005,
when Category 3 Wilma sped past. The town escaped widespread wind
damage, but a storm surge flooded hundreds of homes and some
businesses.
___
Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Matt
Sedensky, Suzette Laboy, Brendan Farrington and Lisa Orkin in
Miami, Sarah Larimer in Homestead, Fla.; Steve Szkotak in Virginia
Beach, Va.; Melinda Deslatte in Baton Rouge, La.; Ben Fox in
Providenciales, Turks and Caicos; Mike Melia in Nassau, Bahamas;
Anita Snow in Havana; and Jonathan Katz in Gonaives, Haiti.
(CORRECTS latest Ike position report was at 8 p.m. EDT sted 7
p.m. EDT. Will be led about 11 p.m. EDT with next update.)
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