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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkNews Around the Republic of Mexico 

Karl Kills 2 in Mexico, Weakens to Depression
email this pageprint this pageemail usRobert Campbell - Reuters
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September 18, 2010



Damage caused by the passage of Hurricane Karl in Cardel, Veracruz, Mexico. Hurricane Igor bore down on Bermuda Saturday after another cyclone raked Mexico, killing two people and battering the country with heavy winds and rains. (AFP/Alfredo Estrella)
Veracruz, Mexico - Hurricane Karl hit Mexico's central Gulf Coast on Friday, killing two people in a mudslide, and weakened quickly to a tropical depression as it moved inland.

The storm appeared to have spared Mexican oil operations from major damage after sweeping through the Bay of Campeche, where Mexico produces more than two-thirds of its 2.55 million barrels per day of crude output.

Karl made landfall on Friday morning about 10 miles (15 km) north of the port city of Veracruz, flooding roads and knocking down dozens of trees.

The storm, which weakened from a Category 3 hurricane to a tropical depression as it moved inland, was blowing sustained winds of up to 35 miles per hour (55 kph), the U.S. National Hurricane Center said.

Part of a rain-soaked mountain collapsed on a house in the inland state of Puebla, killing a woman and a child, state authorities said.

Karl was seen dissipating overnight, but state governments across southern Mexico said they feared the storm could still trigger more mudslides and flooding over the weekend.

Earlier in the day, light poles buckled and power went out in part of Veracruz. Before the center of the storm hit the coast, fishermen rushed to secure their small vessels.

"What a fright. I have never seen anything like this," said Ester Garza, a mother of three from central Mexico who was vacationing in the city of Veracruz, where people walking against the wind were unable to advance during heavy gusts.

More than 1,000 people had huddled in shelters along the coast, a Veracruz state civil protection official told W Radio. Operations were suspended at Mexico's only nuclear power plant, which was in Karl's path, officials said.

Mexican authorities are experienced at evacuating people caught in the path of hurricanes and death tolls caused by hurricanes hitting Mexico are usually low.

MINOR WELLS SHUT

Mexico's state oil monopoly Pemex said it had closed down 14 minor wells and evacuated platforms in the Gulf, but the storm seemed to inflict no lasting damage to its operations. It did not say if the wells produced oil or natural gas.

The storm poured rain in coastal areas and raised winds strong enough to bend small palm trees in Veracruz.

Karl could soak swaths of southern Mexico with as much as 10 inches (25 cm) of rain, with more falling in interior mountain towns in coffee-producing Veracruz state.

Mexico's oil industry had to scramble on Thursday after Karl came across the Yucatan Peninsula into the Bay of Campeche. Two of Mexico's main oil exporting ports closed as Karl passed. They reopened on Friday.

IGOR CHURNING IN ATLANTIC

Karl is just one storm that has formed in the Atlantic this hurricane season. Hurricane Igor, a Category 2 storm, swirled with sustained winds of close to 110 mph (175 kph) on a course that could take it to Bermuda by Sunday.

"Some strengthening is possible on Saturday and Igor could become a major hurricane again," the U.S. National Hurricane Center said.

Any hurricane with top sustained winds of more than 110 mph (177 kph) is considered major and capable of causing devastating damage.

Julia, located far east of Igor and posing no immediate threat to land, was downgraded to a tropical storm from a hurricane.

Bermuda residents stocked up on supplies and secured their homes. The rocky island, a tiny British overseas territory that is a hub for the global insurance industry, is one of the world's most isolated yet densely populated islands.

The Bermuda government's emergency agency warned residents to prepare for a similar impact from Igor as the island experienced from the 2003 Hurricane Fabian, which killed four people and caused millions of dollars of damage.

Loading shopping bags onto his moped in downtown Hamilton, Matthew Lewis said he would board up the windows of his hillside home and remove any items from his garden that could become projectiles in hurricane-force wind.

"When you see a storm that large, you do tend to get a bit daunted, to say the least, because we've got nowhere to run to. So yeah, it does get a little bit scary," Lewis said.

(Additional reporting by Julio Martinez in Puebla; Jason Lange, Michael O'Boyle and Luis Mena in Mexico City; and Samantha Strangeways, Jane Ross and Katharine Jackson in Hamilton, Bermuda; Editing by Missy Ryan, Kieran Murray and Mohammad Zargham)




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