BELIZE BRACES FOR TROPICAL STORM HARVEY
brace for the approach of what is now Tropical Storm Harvey.
Patrick Jones reporting...
“By this time tomorrow, Tropical Storm Harvey will be making landfall
somewhere along the coast between Belize City and Dangriga town. Satellite
pictures from this afternoon show the minimal tropical storm hugging the
Honduran coastline heading in a westerly direction. Chief Meteorologist
Dennis Gonguez says this general motion will continue for the rest of the
life of the storm.
Dennis Gonguez – Chief Meteorologist
“We’re we’re looking at landfall somewhere near just to the north of
Dangriga Town.”
Patrick Jones - Reporter
Is it bringing with it a lot of rain?
Dennis Gonguez – Chief Meteorologist
“We are looking at three to five inches of rainfall possibly seven inches
enhanced by the mountainous areas in the south so it increases the
potential for some flooding in those areas.”
That is why the National Emergency Management Organization, NEMO is
advising people in flood-prone areas of the country to head higher grounds
before the storm hits.
Noreen Fairweather – National Emergency Coordinator
“Move and move early, move to higher grounds. All the communities
particularly those like those in the Stann Creek Area; you have Gales Point
that’s very near to where the landfall is forecast, Mullins River, Dangriga
Town itself; you have behind the town all those areas Wagierele, New Site,
people who live in those areas, they know there areas flood they need to
move to higher ground.”
Voluntary evacuations started on Friday afternoon and will continue at
first light on Saturday. Fairweather says that while they cannot force
anyone to leave their homes, it is always better to be safe than sorry.
Noreen Fairweather – National Emergency Coordinator
“From tomorrow morning we will have the people in Punta Negra we are
getting them into shelters. In Gales Point it is right in the community so
they can just move into their shelter as early as possible it is not like
they have to travel very far, they just basically walk down the road and
get into a safe place if they know their homes are challenged in any way,
there may be some homes that some people might not be comfortable in. We
don’t want to forget that we have communities in the south that are prone
to flooding, these people live there they know they flood these people live
there they know they flood."
Gonguez says that the effects of Tropical Storm Harvey will begin to be
felt in Belizean territory early tomorrow.
Dennis Gonguez – Chief Meteorologist
The winds start affecting our extreme outer waters around 8:00 a,m.
tomorrow morning and as the day progresses we expect conditions to
deteriorate and the system makes landfall about 6:00 p.m.
NEMO officials are advising event organizers to consider putting their
planned weekend activities on hold until the storm passes. Likewise, the
best advice right now is to cancel any planned trips that involve our
coastal waters. By Sunday morning, Tropical Storm Harvey should have
crossed Belize into Guatemala.
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