Hurricane “Milton” weakened to category 4, but “extremely dangerous” before arriving in Florida

Hurricane “Milton” weakened to category 4, but “extremely dangerous” before arriving in Florida
Hurricane “Milton” weakened to category 4, but “extremely dangerous” before arriving in Florida

The hurricane Milton is weakened, but remains “extremely dangerous”, before its planned arrival Wednesday in Florida in the southeast of the United States, a region already affected by the destructive passage ofHelene end of September.

• Also read: “Milton”, maximum category hurricane, threatens Mexico and Florida

• Also read: “It’s going to be terrible”: a Quebecer in Florida opts for evacuation before the arrival of Hurricane “Milton”

• Also read: Hurricane “Milton”: “It’s not the same level of stress as two weeks ago”

The hurricane Milton was downgraded Tuesday to category 4 (on a Saffir-Simpson scale of 5). It “is expected to remain an extremely dangerous hurricane until it makes landfall in Florida,” the US National Hurricane Center (NHC) said.

His arrival comes at a time when Republicans and Democrats continue to argue over the response of federal authorities to the cataclysm caused by the hurricane. Helenewhich caused at least 230 deaths in the southeast of the country.

Milton is expected to make landfall in this southeastern American state, the third most populous in the United States, during the night from Wednesday to Thursday, after having skirted the northern coast of the Mexican Yucatan peninsula on Monday and Tuesday, where it could cause “destructive waves”.

The NHC, which had predicted Monday “the worst” storm to hit the Tampa region – a major city in Florida – in more than a hundred years, is now expecting winds blowing at 250 km/h. He mentioned 270 km/h on Monday.

The new Mexican president Claudia Sheinbaum has alerted the population to the possibility of “torrential rains”.

Earlier Monday, workers barricaded doors and windows in Yucatan, as fishermen returned their boats to port.

“Fierce”

Less than two weeks after the passage ofHeleneresidents of Florida were also preparing with concern for the arrival of this new hurricane.

“It’s too much,” sighs Ernst Bontemps as he attaches wooden planks to the windows of his clinic in Saint Petersburg in west Florida.

“It’s really hard because we have already seen our city completely devastated” not long ago and “it’s starting again,” this 61-year-old gastroenterologist despairs.

Milton is a “ferocious” hurricane, Republican Governor Ron DeSantis warned Monday.

“You have time to leave. So, please do it,” he urged residents of at-risk areas. To facilitate these evacuations, the Florida authorities have announced that they will make tolls free.

Milton is expected to cross the state from southwest to northeast. Of Florida’s 67 counties, 51 are under a state of emergency.

In Orlando, a city with many amusement parks in the center of the state, hundreds of cars waited Monday under a gray sky for a distribution of sandbags.

Dominick Tucciarone, 29, explained to AFP that he had not planned to evacuate, but admitted to being worried. “It’s been a long time since the eye of a hurricane passed over Orlando,” he said.

Disney World park said on its website that it would remain open Tuesday. In Tampa, zookeepers rushed to evacuate porcupines, elephants and even orangutans to protected areas.

The deadliest since 2005

By warming sea and ocean waters, climate change makes rapid intensification of storms more likely and increases the risk of more powerful hurricanes, scientists say.

Temperatures in the North Atlantic have been evolving continuously for more than a year at record heat levels, well above historical records, according to public data from the American Meteorological Observatory (NOAA).

NOAA warned at the end of May that the hurricane season, which extends from the beginning of June to the end of November, was expected to be an extraordinary year in the region.

Milton intervenes even though emergency services are still hard at work to help the many victims of the hurricane Helenethe deadliest to hit the continental United States since Katrina in 2005.

Helenewhich caused destructive floods and caused at least 230 deaths across half a dozen states, took a political turn, in the middle of the American presidential campaign.

Republican candidate and former President Donald Trump accuses the federal state, led by Democrats, of having done too little, too late, to provide assistance to the disaster victims, which President Joe Biden and his vice-president Kamala Harris, candidate for the November 5 presidential election, strongly contest.

“Playing political games right now, in these crisis situations – we are at the height of it – is simply irresponsible and selfish,” criticized Ms. Harris.

And added: “it’s playing politics, instead of doing the job you took an oath to do, which is to put the people first.”

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