Tropical Storm Humberto dumps rain on hurricane-hit Bahamas

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MIAMI, Sept 15, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Tropical Storm Humberto lashed the
Bahamas with rain and wind on Saturday, possibly slowing down relief efforts
in the wake of the devastation wrought less than two weeks ago by Hurricane
Dorian.

The US National Hurricane Center said the center of the storm, packing
maximum sustained winds of 60 miles (95 kilometers) per hour, was passing
Saturday evening about 85 miles north of Great Abaco Island, one of the areas
hardest hit by Dorian.

Humberto was moving away from the Bahamas on a path taking it well off the
east coast of Florida this weekend and early next week, the NHC said.

The storm is expected to strengthen into a hurricane on Sunday but is not
forecast to impact the Bahamas or the US by that point.

“Significant storm surge is not expected in the northwestern Bahamas from
this system,” the Miami-based NHC said — good news for residents of Abaco
and Grand Bahama still trying to get back on track after Dorian swept through
early this month.

But about two to four inches (five to 10 centimeters) of rain were expected
in most areas, with isolated flooding in low-lying areas, the Bahamian
National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) cautioned.

“I know this is not something people in Abaco and Grand Bahama would like
to hear at this time, but it’s out there and the storm will bring heavy
downpours over the Bahama islands,” Shavon Bonimy, senior meteorologist in
Grand Bahama, told The Nassau Guardian.

“So we have to be prepared.”

NEMA spokesman Carl Smith told reporters on Friday that the storm would
likely “slow down logistics” of relief efforts, but added: “We have
contingency plans in place.”

“Fuel and water remain the biggest needs in Abaco,” Smith said.

So far, the death toll from monster storm Dorian is at 52, but officials
say that number is likely to go up. About 1,300 people are still unaccounted
for, but Smith said officials are working to cross-reference new data and
locate the missing.

Former Bahamian prime minister Hubert Ingraham said earlier this week he
feared the final death toll could be in the hundreds.

– ‘Climate crisis’ –

Meanwhile 71 people were staying in shelters on Grand Bahama island and
2,037 in shelters in New Providence, where Nassau is located, Smith said.

“I just came back from Abaco. I must say (I) was horrified. I’ve never seen
such a level of systematic devastation,” UN Secretary General Antonio
Guterres said Saturday after traveling to the islands the day prior.

“Hurricane Dorian has been classified as category five. I think it’s
category hell.”

Guterres said Dorian demonstrated the need to address climate change.

“It was not powered by the devil. We have always had many hurricanes, but
now they are more intense, and they are more frequent, and they are powered
by climate change,” he said.

“We need to make sure that we reverse the present trend where climate
change is running faster than what we are.”

While he congratulated the Bahamian and other governments along with aid
agencies who responded to the hurricane, he warned recovering from the
disaster “will require a large investment” and said the country deserved the
support of the international community.