Fuites sur Nord Stream: l’UE promet la…

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Hors service à cause de la guerre en Ukraine, les gazoducs Nord Stream reliant la Russie à l’Allemagne sous la mer Baltique ont été tous deux touchés par des fuites spectaculaires précédées d’explosions sous-marines, l’Union européenne promettant la “réponse la plus ferme possible” à ce “sabotage”.

Les trois grandes fuites identifiées depuis lundi au large de l’île danoise de Bornholm, entre le sud de la Suède et la Pologne, sont visibles à la surface avec des bouillonnements allant de 200 mètres jusqu’à un kilomètre de diamètre, a annoncé mardi l’armée danoise, images à l’appui.

Le gazoduc Nord Stream 2 avait subi une forte chute de pression lundi, suivi quelques heures plus tard de Nord Stream 1, dont il suit le tracé sous la Baltique.

La présidente de la Commission européenne, Ursula von der Leyen, a écrit mardi soir sur Twitter avoir “parlé de l’acte de sabotage Nord Stream” avec la Première ministre danoise Mette Frederiksen.

“Il est primordial d’enquêter sur les incidents et de faire toute la lumière sur les événements (…) Toute perturbation délibérée de l’infrastructure énergétique européenne active est inacceptable et entraînera la réponse la plus ferme possible”, a ajouté Mme von der Leyen.

Peu avant, la Première ministre danoise avait déclaré que “l’avis clair des autorités est qu’il s’agit d’actes délibérés. On ne parle pas d’un accident”.

“Des détonations ont eu lieu et il s’agit probablement de sabotage”, a renchéri la Première ministre suédoise démissionnaire Magdalena Andersson, qui assure les affaires courantes après des élections perdues le 11 septembre.

Comme le Danemark, la Suède n’y voit pas un acte d’agression contre elle, les incidents ayant eu lieu en dehors des eaux territoriales, dans les zones économiques exclusives.

Selon Copenhague, les fuites devraient durer “au moins une semaine”, jusqu’à ce que tout le gaz soit sorti des deux ouvrages.

L’institut sismique suédois a enregistré deux explosions sous-marines, “très probablement dues à des détonations”, avant l’incident, comme ses équivalents norvégien et danois.

– Bras de fer –

Objets de bras de fer géopolitiques ces derniers mois, les deux pipelines exploités par un consortium dépendant du géant russe Gazprom ne sont pas opérationnels à cause des conséquences de la guerre en Ukraine. Mais tous les deux étaient encore remplis de gaz.

Le Kremlin, vers qui se sont tournés nombre de regards, s’est dit “extrêmement préoccupé”, estimant qu’il ne fallait exclure “aucune” hypothèse, dont le sabotage.

A Kiev, le conseiller de la présidence ukrainienne, Mykhaïlo Podoliak a dénoncé “une attaque terroriste planifiée” par Moscou, sans avancer de preuves.

Le Premier ministre polonais a également suggéré une implication russe. “Nous voyons clairement que c’est un acte de sabotage, qui marque probablement la prochaine étape de l’escalade de la situation en Ukraine”, a déclaré Mateusz Morawiecki, qui inaugurait justement mardi un gazoduc reliant la Norvège à la Pologne.

“Nous n’excluons aucun scénario, mais nous n’allons pas spéculer sur les mobiles ni les acteurs” pouvant être impliqués, a expliqué la ministre suédoise des Affaires étrangères Ann Linde.

“Il n’y a pas encore d’information nous disant quelque chose sur les responsables”, a pour sa part affirmé Mme Frederiksen.

Côté américain, Washington, après s’être refusé à “confirmer” un acte de sabotage, a dit examiner des informations selon lesquelles les fuites sont “le résultat d’une attaque ou d’une sorte de sabotage”. “Si c’est confirmé, ce n’est clairement dans l’intérêt de personne”, a déclaré le secrétaire d’Etat Antony Blinken devant la presse.

Le conseiller américain à la sécurité nationale, Jake Sullivan, a parlé d’un “apparent sabotage”. Il a tweeté avoir parlé à son homologue danois Jean-Charles Ellermann-Kingombe de l’”apparent sabotage des pipelines Nord Stream”.

L’exploitant des pipelines, le consortium Nord Stream, a reconnu qu’”un incident durant lequel trois tuyaux éprouvent simultanément des difficultés le même jour n’est pas ordinaire”, selon un porte-parole.

– “Extrêmement rare” –

Le Danemark a dépêché sur place deux navires militaires accompagnés d’hélicoptères, et a placé en état d’alerte orange ses infrastructures énergétiques, le deuxième niveau de vigilance le plus élevé.

“Les fuites de gazoducs sont extrêmement rares et nous voyons donc une raison d’augmenter le niveau de vigilance” après les incidents des 24 dernières heures, a expliqué le directeur de l’Agence danoise de l’énergie, Kristoffer Böttzauw.

De son côté, le gouvernement norvégien a décidé de “renforcer la préparation aux situations d’urgence en ce qui concerne les infrastructures et les installations à terre et en mer sur le plateau continental norvégien”. Dans son communiqué, Oslo évoque “une activité accrue de drones” et assure qu’une enquête est en cours.

Nord Stream 2, achevé en 2021, était destiné à doubler la capacité d’importation de gaz russe en Allemagne. Sa mise en service a été suspendue en représailles à l’invasion de l’Ukraine.

Quant à Nord Stream 1, Gazprom a progressivement réduit les volumes de gaz livrés jusqu’à la fermeture complète du gazoduc fin août, accusant les sanctions occidentales d’avoir retardé les réparations nécessaires de l’installation.

La navigation a été interdite dans un rayon de cinq milles nautiques (environ neuf kilomètres) autour des trois fuites, ainsi que leur survol dans un rayon d’un kilomètre.

Selon les autorités danoises, les incidents sont sans conséquences pour la sécurité ou la santé des riverains.

L’impact environnemental direct devrait lui aussi être limité, même si le gaz naturel non brûlé a un puissant effet de serre.

NewsAmericasNow.com

Fuites sur Nord Stream: l’UE promet la…

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Hors service à cause de la guerre en Ukraine, les gazoducs Nord Stream reliant la Russie à l’Allemagne sous la mer Baltique ont été tous deux touchés par des fuites spectaculaires précédées d’explosions sous-marines, l’Union européenne promettant la “réponse la plus ferme possible” à ce “sabotage”.

Les trois grandes fuites identifiées depuis lundi au large de l’île danoise de Bornholm, entre le sud de la Suède et la Pologne, sont visibles à la surface avec des bouillonnements allant de 200 mètres jusqu’à un kilomètre de diamètre, a annoncé mardi l’armée danoise, images à l’appui.

Le gazoduc Nord Stream 2 avait subi une forte chute de pression lundi, suivi quelques heures plus tard de Nord Stream 1, dont il suit le tracé sous la Baltique.

La présidente de la Commission européenne, Ursula von der Leyen, a écrit mardi soir sur Twitter avoir “parlé de l’acte de sabotage Nord Stream” avec la Première ministre danoise Mette Frederiksen.

“Il est primordial d’enquêter sur les incidents et de faire toute la lumière sur les événements (…) Toute perturbation délibérée de l’infrastructure énergétique européenne active est inacceptable et entraînera la réponse la plus ferme possible”, a ajouté Mme von der Leyen.

Peu avant, la Première ministre danoise avait déclaré que “l’avis clair des autorités est qu’il s’agit d’actes délibérés. On ne parle pas d’un accident”.

“Des détonations ont eu lieu et il s’agit probablement de sabotage”, a renchéri la Première ministre suédoise démissionnaire Magdalena Andersson, qui assure les affaires courantes après des élections perdues le 11 septembre.

Comme le Danemark, la Suède n’y voit pas un acte d’agression contre elle, les incidents ayant eu lieu en dehors des eaux territoriales, dans les zones économiques exclusives.

Selon Copenhague, les fuites devraient durer “au moins une semaine”, jusqu’à ce que tout le gaz soit sorti des deux ouvrages.

L’institut sismique suédois a enregistré deux explosions sous-marines, “très probablement dues à des détonations”, avant l’incident, comme ses équivalents norvégien et danois.

– Bras de fer –

Objets de bras de fer géopolitiques ces derniers mois, les deux pipelines exploités par un consortium dépendant du géant russe Gazprom ne sont pas opérationnels à cause des conséquences de la guerre en Ukraine. Mais tous les deux étaient encore remplis de gaz.

Le Kremlin, vers qui se sont tournés nombre de regards, s’est dit “extrêmement préoccupé”, estimant qu’il ne fallait exclure “aucune” hypothèse, dont le sabotage.

A Kiev, le conseiller de la présidence ukrainienne, Mykhaïlo Podoliak a dénoncé “une attaque terroriste planifiée” par Moscou, sans avancer de preuves.

Le Premier ministre polonais a également suggéré une implication russe. “Nous voyons clairement que c’est un acte de sabotage, qui marque probablement la prochaine étape de l’escalade de la situation en Ukraine”, a déclaré Mateusz Morawiecki, qui inaugurait justement mardi un gazoduc reliant la Norvège à la Pologne.

“Nous n’excluons aucun scénario, mais nous n’allons pas spéculer sur les mobiles ni les acteurs” pouvant être impliqués, a expliqué la ministre suédoise des Affaires étrangères Ann Linde.

“Il n’y a pas encore d’information nous disant quelque chose sur les responsables”, a pour sa part affirmé Mme Frederiksen.

Côté américain, Washington s’est refusé à “confirmer” un acte de sabotage.

L’exploitant des pipelines, le consortium Nord Stream, a reconnu qu’”un incident durant lequel trois tuyaux éprouvent simultanément des difficultés le même jour n’est pas ordinaire”, selon un porte-parole.

– “Extrêmement rare” –

Le Danemark a dépêché sur place deux navires militaires accompagnés d’hélicoptères, et a placé en état d’alerte orange ses infrastructures énergétiques, le deuxième niveau de vigilance le plus élevé.

“Les fuites de gazoducs sont extrêmement rares et nous voyons donc une raison d’augmenter le niveau de vigilance” après les incidents des 24 dernières heures, a expliqué le directeur de l’Agence danoise de l’énergie, Kristoffer Böttzauw.

De son côté, le gouvernement norvégien a décidé de “renforcer la préparation aux situations d’urgence en ce qui concerne les infrastructures et les installations à terre et en mer sur le plateau continental norvégien”. Dans son communiqué, Oslo évoque “une activité accrue de drones” et assure qu’une enquête est en cours.

Nord Stream 2, achevé en 2021, était destiné à doubler la capacité d’importation de gaz russe en Allemagne. Sa mise en service a été suspendue en représailles à l’invasion de l’Ukraine.

Quant à Nord Stream 1, Gazprom a progressivement réduit les volumes de gaz livrés jusqu’à la fermeture complète du gazoduc fin août, accusant les sanctions occidentales d’avoir retardé les réparations nécessaires de l’installation.

La navigation a été interdite dans un rayon de cinq milles nautiques (environ neuf kilomètres) autour des trois fuites, ainsi que leur survol dans un rayon d’un kilomètre.

Selon les autorités danoises, les incidents sont sans conséquences pour la sécurité ou la santé des riverains.

L’impact environnemental direct devrait lui aussi être limité, même si le gaz naturel non brûlé a un puissant effet de serre.

NewsAmericasNow.com

70% chance of another tropical depression in 48 hours Loop Cayman Islands

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cayman Compass
Loop News

September 26, 2022 09:44 PM ET

The National Hurricane Center reported that another disturbance is located a few hundred miles west of Cabo Verde Islands. It has a 70 per cent chance of developing into a tropical depression in the next 48 hours.

Currently, the system is producing showers and thunderstorms and environmental conditions are conducive for the system to further develop.

The disturbance is forecast to meander for the next day or two and then turn north-northwestward by early Thursday.

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NWC gets seven trucks valued at $92.6m for fleet Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

The National Water Commission (NWC) has received seven trucks, valued at approximately $92.6 million, which will significantly bolster the entity’s service delivery capability.

The vehicles were handed over on Tuesday during a ceremony at the NWC’s head office on Marescaux Road in Kingston, which was addressed by Prime Minister Andrew Holness.

The trucks, which were supplied by the Tank-Weld Group, have a capacity of approximately 5,000 gallons of water and are equipped with front and rear watering, overhead spray, and side pipe features.

The units will be deployed across the NWC’s six regions. An eighth unit purchased is expected to be handed over to the NWC shortly.

Prime Minister Holness, in his address, said with the addition of the trucks to the NWC’s fleet, the entity is now able to provide emergency water supply to critical institutions, including hospitals, health centres, police stations, and schools.

He noted that the acquisitions are consistent with the Government’s mandate to build the resilience of Jamaica’s critical services.

“The NWC must always have the capacity to deliver water if there is a break in service, whether it is a mechanical break or systems break or, as we are experiencing now in some areas, drought or turbidity. We expect that going forward, the NWC must maintain the capacity to deliver water if there is a break in regular service,” the prime minister said.

Holness said the decision to allocate capital resources to purchase the trucks represents the Government’s investment in this vital resource, noting that “the NWC, in order for it to be a true and effective utility, must have the capacity to respond in emergencies”.

Minister without portfolio in the Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation, Senator Matthew Samuda, said the increase in the NWC’s capacity “will allow us to be responsive to the needs of citizens and responsive to the needs of businesses”.

“There will be disruptions [in supply], but we will be better able to respond because of this investment,” he said.

Prime Minister Andrew Holness examines the features inside the cabin of one of seven new water trucks purchased for the National Water Commission (NWC). Presenting the unit’s key to is NWC President Mark Barnett. (Photo: JIS)

Chairman of the NWC, Michael Shaw, who noted the eastern section of the island (Portland, St Thomas, and Clarendon) is now experiencing turbidity due to the recent severe weather that affected Jamaica, pointed out that the trucks are a short-term solution while NWC continues work to provide all homes islandwide with access to potable water.

“It is hoped that these trucks will help to alleviate the demand for water when we have adverse water conditions. While there are challenges right across the island, we do have a strategic plan to alleviate the challenges we have in this country,” he said.

By Rochelle Williams, JIS News

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Despite challenges, St Elizabeth student aces external exams Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Determination, proper time management, organization, and motivation were the cornerstones on which Joshell Allen of New Market in St Elizabeth achieved success in her secondary-level external examinations.

The 19-year-old graduate of Hampton School in Malvern, St Elizabeth, gained a combined 10 subjects in the Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate (CSEC) examinations in 2019 and 2020, while in grades 10 and 11, and five Caribbean Advanced Proficiency Examination (CAPE) subjects in 2021 and 2022, while in sixth form (grades 12 & 13).

For CSEC she earned grade one in four subjects, grade two in another four, and grade three in two, while for CAPE, she got grade two in three subjects and grade three in the remaining two.

“I did my first two CSEC subjects when I was in Grade 10, which were Social Studies and Office Administration. I then did another eight when I was in Grade 11, which included all the sciences – Chemistry, Biology and Physics – as well as Mathematics, English, Information Technology, Principles of Business and Spanish,” Allen told JIS News.

“At the CAPE level, I did Communication Studies, Caribbean Studies, Biology, Chemistry, and Environmental Science,” she added.

Her accomplishments, however, did not come easy, and she had to devise several strategies to stay on top of her studies. This, while making daily four-hour round trips from home to school and back, totalling some 84 kilometres.

“I had to get up at 4 in the morning to get ready for school, and I would be home by 6 in the evenings. I took an hour’s break or nap, and then I’d study from 8pm to 10pm, then take a 30-minute break before I go to bed. So, I always ensured that I had breaks, so as not to burn myself out,” she noted.

Allen received support from the St Elizabeth Poor Relief Department, which has been assisting her family since she was in grade six at Clapham Primary School in Brighton, in the parish.

She attributes some of her success to the years of assistance given by the department that provided supplies, bus fares and other resources vital to her school life.

“My family was very important. I had their support 100 per cent because there were times when I wanted to give up because it honestly got hard. When I was doing my subjects, it was during COVID-19, plus a good amount of teachers migrated, so there was a point in time where you had to, basically, be teaching yourself things to not get left behind,” Allen said.

“The Poor Relief Department was the biggest help in that time. I received [some] amount of money each month to go towards my credit for online classes, so I wouldn’t miss my classes. [Also], bus fare was pricey, and it wouldn’t have been possible without their help. It was a relief knowing that each day I could confidently go on the bus knowing that I don’t owe anything, that my bus fare was already covered,” she added.

Her social worker, Desreen Douglas, who is assigned to the New Market area, was also a source of encouragement for the youth, who was a part of the animal and wildlife and etiquette clubs at her school, as well as a volunteer for community clean-ups.

Allen’s passion lies in the field of medicine, and she has been accepted at the Wenzhou Medical University in China for a bachelor’s degree in medicine and surgery.

She is currently doing orientation online, which is also where she will be doing classes.

The Poor Relief Department is helping her to procure a proper laptop, which she needs, as well as school funding or a scholarship.

“No matter how difficult or how much you think somebody wouldn’t want to help, always ask because they never know until you do. The worst you could be told is no, but at best you could get exactly the help, motivation and mentorship that you need,” Allen said.

Meanwhile, Douglas told JIS News that Allen is humble and always puts her best foot forward, despite the many challenges.

“We are trying to see how best we can fit in. We said to her, ‘Okay since you are going to do an online [class], we [will] try to furnish you with books’. So, whatever she passed on to me, I see how best I can take it forward. We want her to fulfil her dreams, so we’re trying our best now,” she said.

At the St Elizabeth Municipal Corporation’s monthly meeting held on September 8, Allen and other beneficiaries of the Poor Relief Department received various awards for their CSEC and CAPE results.

By Okoye Henry, JIS News

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Se podrá retirar hasta $10 mil del 401 K sin penalidades si sufrieron pérdidas tras el paso del huracán Fiona

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El secretario de Hacienda, Francisco Parés, dijo en el programa Noches Con Sentido de Radio Isla, que se pospuso la fecha de vencimiento de la Planilla del IVU, para el 20 de octubre.   

Asimismo, Parés  informó  que se eliminó el IVU en los muelles, para evitar que cerca de 16 mil comerciantes que importen,  tengan que pagar este impuesto.

También, las personas que tienen ahorro en cuentas  en planes  cualificados como el 401 K, pueden solicitar hasta 10,000 de retiros de estas cuentas si sufrieron daños tras el paso del huracán Fiona.

“Si sufrieron pérdidas por causas del huracán Fiona, pueden solicitar hasta 10 mil dólares de estas cuentas sin pagar un solo dólar ni penalidades sobre ese retiro”.

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Housing development programme on stream Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

Government may be trending ahead of its 2022 housing development goal.

While giving an update on Government’s housing revolution, Minister of Housing, Lands and Maintenance, Dwight Sutherland, revealed plans to further reduce the population density in the urban corridor by building units in Mason Hall Street and Exmouth, The City.

“We have density challenges within the urban corridor and we have to address it. So, we have to remove the number of persons to take the strain off the services that we provide for the 49 housing estates,” Sutherland said while adding that the site at Exmouth will be high-rise units and land at Eden Lodge, St Michael will be used to built additional quadplex units.

The Housing Minister was speaking in the Parliament on Tuesday, on a resolution to acquire 7.2 acres of land at Brighton, St George for housing development. He stated that the St George property will facilitate 42 housing units.

He also disclosed six sites where work either started or was in the process.

These include Clifton, St Philip [nine lots]; Coconut Hall. St Lucy [22 lots]; River Crescent, St Philip [62 houses]; Grazettes Great House, St Michael [three quadplexes]; Branchbury East, St Joseph [13 lots]; and Concordia North, St Philip [144 houses].

Sutherland stated that by year-end, out of the 300 houses to be built at Atlantic Breeze, Christ Church, 100 houses will be completed. He added that five quadplex units at Alleyne’s Court on Whitepark Road, St Michael will be finished by the end of October.

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‘Geen politiek bedrijven met brief granman Aboikoni aan vp Brunswijk’

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

door Samuel Wens BOVEN-SURINAME — Granman van de Saamaka, Albert Aboikoni, heeft op zijn laatste brief van 2 september aan

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Ja’s ex-sprint queen Veronica Campbell Brown welcomes baby boy Loop Cayman Islands

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cayman Compass
Loop Lifestyle

4 hrs ago

A combo image of Veronica Campbell Brown and husband Omar alongside their baby son Zane. (Images: Instagram via @vcampbellbrown)

Retired Jamaican sprinter Veronica Campbell Brown has welcomed her second child, Zane Lucas Brown, with husband Omar.

The eight-time Olympic medallist announced her pregnancy via Instagram on her birthday in May and followed up with the announcement of the arrival of her son in another post to the social media site on Tuesday.

In the Instagram Reel, she shares images of herself in the hospital, her baby boy with his big sister and his dad.

Zane was born seven days ago, on September 20, 2022.

The retired sprinter captioned the video with Zane’s weight at birth and the hashtags #newadditiontofamily, #babyboy, #bigsisterlove, #familyiseverything, and #blessed.

The Browns welcomed their first child, Avianna, in 2019.

Among those sending congratulations to the mom are Elaine Thompson Herah, US athlete Dawn Harper-Nelson, and entertainer Kevin Downswell.

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Hurricane Ian strikes Cuba, Florida braces for winds, floods Loop Cayman Islands

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cayman Compass

Hurricane Ian tore into western Cuba as a major hurricane Tuesday and left 1 million people without electricity, then churned on a collision course with Florida over warm Gulf waters amid expectations it would strengthen into a catastrophic Category 4 storm.

Ian made landfall in Cuba’s Pinar del Rio province, where officials set up 55 shelters, evacuated 50,000 people, rushed in emergency personnel and took steps to protect crops in the nation’s main tobacco-growing region.

The US National Hurricane Center said Cuba suffered “significant wind and storm surge impacts” when the hurricane struck with top sustained winds of 125 mph (205 kmh).

A vehicle weaves through fallen trees bought down by the winds of Hurricane Ian, in Havana, Cuba, Tuesday, September 27, 2022. (AP Photo/Ismael Francisco)

Ian was expected to get even stronger over the warm Gulf of Mexico, reaching top winds of 130 mph (209 kph) as it approaches the southwest coast of Florida, where 2.5 million people were ordered to evacuate.

Tropical storm force winds were expected across the southern peninsula late Tuesday, reaching hurricane-force Wednesday — when the hurricane’s eye was predicted to make landfall. With tropical storm-force winds extending 140 miles (225 kilometres) from Ian’s centre, damage was expected across a wide area of Florida.

It was not yet clear precisely where Ian would crash ashore. Its exact track could determine how severe the storm surge is for Tampa Bay, said University of Miami hurricane researcher Brian McNoldy. Landfall south of the bay could make the impact “much less bad,” McNoldy said.

Gil Gonzalez boarded his windows with plywood Tuesday and had sandbags ready to protect his Tampa home. He and his wife had stocked up on bottled water and packed flashlights, battery packs for their cellphones and a camp stove with a large propane burner as they prepared to evacuate.

Crews clear fallen trees bought down by the winds of Hurricane Ian, in Havana, Cuba, Tuesday, September 27, 2022. (AP Photo/Ismael Francisco)

“All the prized possessions, we’ve put them upstairs in a friend’s house and nearby, and we’ve got the car loaded,” Gonzalez said. He added: “I think we’re ready.”

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis urged people to prepare for extended power outages and to get out of the storm’s potential path.

Hundreds of residents were being evacuated from several nursing homes in the Tampa area, where hospitals were also moving some patients. Airports in Tampa, St Petersburg and Key West closed. Busch Gardens in Tampa closed ahead of the storm, while several Orlando-area theme parks, including Disney World and Sea World, planned to close Wednesday and Thursday.

Ian’s forward movement was expected to slow over the Gulf, enabling the hurricane to grow wider and stronger. The hurricane warning expanded Tuesday to cover roughly 220 miles (350 kilometres) of Florida’s west coast. The area includes Fort Myers as well as Tampa and St Petersburg, which could get their first direct hit by a major hurricane since 1921.

Eastbound traffic crowds Interstate 4 as people evacuate in preparation for Hurricane Ian approaches the western side of the state, Tuesday, September 27, 2022, in Lake Alfred, Fla. (AP Photo/Phelan M Ebenhack)

“It’s a monster and then there’s the confusion of the path,” said Renee Correa, who headed inland to Orlando from the Tampa area with her daughter and Chihuahua. “Tampa has been lucky for 100 years, but it’s a little scary now.”

Forecasters warned the hurricane will be felt across a large area as it ploughs across Florida with an anticipated turn northward. Flash floods were possible across the whole state, and portions of Florida’s east coast faced a potential storm surge threat as Ian’s bands approach the Atlantic Ocean. Parts of Georgia and South Carolina also could see flooding rains into the weekend.

Georgia Governor Brian Kemp pre-emptively declared a state of emergency Tuesday, ordering 500 National Guard troops to be placed on standby to respond as needed.

As the storm’s centre moved into the Gulf, scenes of destruction emerged in Cuba’s world-famous tobacco belt. The owner of the premier Finca Robaina cigar producer posted photos on social media of wood-and-thatch roofs smashed to the ground, greenhouses in rubble and wagons overturned.

“It was apocalyptic, a real disaster,” wrote Hirochi Robaina, grandson of the operation’s founder.

State media published photos showing water flowing through the town of San Juan y Martinez. The western provinces of Pinar del Rio and Artemisa were without power.

Local government station TelePinar reported heavy damage at the main hospital in Pinar del Rio city, tweeting photos of collapsed ceilings, toppled trees and debris flung about its property. No deaths were reported.

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