Thousands ordered to flee Hurricane John
POSTED: 5:26 p.m. EDT, August 31, 2006
Adjust font size:
CABO SAN LUCAS, Mexico (CNN) -- Government officials ordered the evacuation of 15,000 people from low-lying areas on the Baja California peninsula Thursday as Hurricane John approached, the state governor's office said.
Officials said residents would be evacuated from low-lying areas by force if necessary, and hotels were sending foreign tourists home, Reuters reported. (Watch Mexico brace for Hurricane John -- :58)
"We are evacuating everyone," Mithza Velazquez, concierge at the beachfront Hilton Hotel in Los Cabos, told Reuters. (Path)
John already has caused heavy flooding on Mexico's mainland between the popular tourist destination of Acapulco and the city of Manzanillo to the northwest.
The Mexican government warned residents along the coast to "rush to completion" protective measures for Hurricane John, as a hurricane warning was issued for the area from Cabo Corrientes to San Blas, northwest of Guadalajara. Islas Marias was included.
In its 5 p.m. ET advisory, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said the storm was about 65 miles southwest of Las Islas Marias about 240 miles southeast of the southern tip of Baja California.
"Preparations to protect life and property in these areas should have already been completed," the National Hurricane Center said, quoting the government.
Hurricane John was downgraded from a Category 3 storm to Category 2 Thursday afternoon, when its top winds weakened from 125 mph to 105.
A hurricane warning remained in effect for the southern Baja peninsula from San Everisto southward on the east coast and from Bahia Magdalena southward on the west coast.
A hurricane warning means hurricane conditions are expected within the warning area within 24 hours.
A tropical storm warning remained in effect from San Blas to Mazatlan.
Mexican civil defense authorities said 10,000 residents were affected, including many in Acapulco, which has a population of 1 million.
In the fishing mecca of Cabo San Lucas, at the tip of Baja California, authorities said they were preparing shelters for the possible evacuation of 30,000 people. All flights from that area to the United States were nearly sold out, officials said.
The center of the hurricane was about 60 miles west-southwest of Cabo Corrientes.
The storm was moving to the northwest at near 13 mph, a motion that was expected to continue for at least 24 hours. The center will move near or over southern Baja California on Friday, forecasters said.
Hurricane-force winds extended outward up to 35 miles from John's center. Tropical storm-force winds extended outward up to 105 miles.
Rainfall amounts of 6 to 10 inches, with isolated totals up to 18 inches, were possible along the western coast of Mexico within the warning areas. These amounts could cause life-threatening flash floods and mudslides over areas of mountainous terrain, the hurricane center said.
Coastal storm surge flooding of up to 5 feet above normal tide levels along with large and dangerous battering waves can be expected on the shores near the path of the center of the hurricane, it said.
John is the 10th named storm of the season in the eastern Pacific. Storms in the eastern Pacific are named separately from those in the Atlantic, the central Pacific or the western Pacific.
Last October, Hurricane Wilma pounded Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula with 125 mph winds and heavy rains. The Category 3 storm dealt a heavy blow to the tourism industry in Cancun, Cozumel and Playa de Carmen.
Meanwhile, Tropical Storm Ernesto's maximum sustained winds reached 70 mph Thursday, just 4 mph short of Category 1 hurricane strength, as it lashed the eastern Carolinas. (