terça-feira, 5 de abril de 2016

CICLONE TROPICAL NO PACÍFICO FORA DE ÉPOCA



IMAGEM DO DIA 06.04.2016 DO CICLONE TROPICAL ZENA CATEGORIA 1




Tropical Cyclone Eighteen




Last Updated: 06/04/2016, 03:00:00 (Hora oficial do Brasil)
  • Location: -18.5N 184.9E
  • Movement: ESE at 26 mph
  • Wind: 150KPH
  • Pressure: --
Last Updated: 05/04/2016, 03:00:00 (Hora oficial do Brasil)
  • Location: -14.8N 193.6E
  • Movement: ESE at 20 mph
  • Wind: 65KPH
  • Pressure: --

Tropical Cyclone Eighteen



theguardian.com

Battered Fiji braces for fresh disaster with arrival of Cyclone Zena 

Nationwide curfew in place as island nation prepares for second cyclone in three months to hit 

Fijia is battening down for another tropical cyclone, just weeks after Cyclone Winston left a trail of destruction across the country.  

Fiji is battening down for another tropical cyclone, just weeks after Cyclone Winston left a trail of destruction across the country. Photograph: Naziah Ali/AFP/Getty Images 

Fiji is preparing for the arrival of Cyclone Zena, just weeks after the most powerful storm in the Pacific nation’s history laid waste to large swaths of land and left 42 people dead.
On Wednesday, the government imposed a nationwide curfew from 6pm, ordering all residents to remain indoors until the threat from the category three tropical storm had passed.
Cyclone Zena, with winds in excess of 120kph (75mph), is due to hit Fiji on Thursday.
Category five Cyclone Winston, one of the most powerful storms recorded in the southern hemisphere, killed 42 people and flattened settlements when it struck in February. Prime minister Frank Bainimarama said it could take years for Fiji to recover.
With widespread damage to homes across Fiji, many people have returned to shelters used when Cyclone Winston hit. Nearly 80 evacuation centres have been opened with 3,592 people taking shelter there, said the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. 
 

“We have pretty significant concerns of public health outbreaks,” Alice Clements, Fiji representative at the UN Children’s Agency, Unicef, said.
“In times of flooding there is an increase in water borne diseases such as diarrhoea, eye inflections and the spread of mosquito diseases such as dengue fever and the Zika virus.”

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