Wilma strengthens to category 4 hurricane (AP) Updated: 2005-10-19 14:49 The storm is the record-tying 12th hurricane of the season, the same number
reached in 1969; 12 is the most in one season since record-keeping began in
1851.
On Monday, Wilma became the Atlantic hurricane season's 21st named storm,
tying the record set in 1933 and exhausting the list of names for this year.
The deadly season has already witnessed the devastation of Katrina and Rita
in the past two months, which killed more than 1,200 people and caused billions
of dollars in damage.
Honduras and its neighbors already are recovering from flooding and mudslides
caused earlier this month from storms related to Hurricane Stan. At least 796
people were killed, most of them in Guatemala, with many more still missing.
NOAA satellite image of Hurricane Wilma taken
at 3:45 p.m. EDT on October 18, 2005, as the storm continues brewing into
a stronger hurricane in the northwestern Caribbean
Sea.[Reuters] | The government of flood-prone Honduras warned that Hurricane Wilma posed "an
imminent threat to life and property of the people of the Atlantic coast."
Neighboring Nicaragua also declared an alert.
Honduran President Ricardo Maduro declared "a maximum alert" along the
northern coast and his office said emergency personnel and resources had been
sent to the area, where evacuations were possible.
In Nicaragua, national disaster prevention chief Geronimo Giusto said the
army, police and rescue workers were being mobilized and evacuation points
readied.
Authorities in the Cayman Islands earlier called an alert.
Forecasters said Wilma should avoid the central U.S. Gulf coast that was
devastated by Katrina and Rita. "There's no scenario now that takes it toward
Louisiana or Mississippi, but that could change," said Max Mayfield, director of
the National Hurricane Center.
The six-month hurricane season ends Nov. 30. Wilma is the last on the list of
storm names for 2005; there are 21 names on the yearly list because the letters
Q, U, X, Y and Z are skipped.
If any other storms form, letters from the Greek alphabet would be used,
starting with Alpha, for the first time. Storms have gotten alphabetical names
only in the past 60 years.
There have been 10 late-season hurricanes of Category 3 or higher since
1995.
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