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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Tourists crowd Mexican shelters


A Mexican army soldier carries a baby into a shelter in Playa del Carmen, Mexico, on Sunday.
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Mark Stevenson Associated Press

CANCUN, Mexico – Hurricane Emily lashed the Yucatan peninsula Sunday, hours after thousands of jittery tourists streamed out of their waterfront hotels and fled inland to shelter in schools and gymnasiums.

The Category 4 storm caused heavy flooding that swept four people to their deaths in Jamaica on Saturday. In Mexico, it downed signs, toppled trees and whipped white sands from the beaches in Cancun.

Power outages were reported in Cancun and in Playa del Carmen, a resort town south of Cancun, as well as on the islands of Cozumel and las Mujeres.

Emily’s winds decreased from 145 mph to 135 mph as it bore down on the Mexican coastline Sunday evening. Forecasters say it will likely weaken further as it heads across the peninsula and enters the Gulf of Mexico.

Two people also were killed in a helicopter crash in the Gulf of Mexico as more than 15,500 workers were evacuated from offshore oil platforms, raising to seven the number of people killed in the second major hurricane of the Atlantic season.

Emily was likely to make landfall again Wednesday anywhere from northeastern Mexico to southern Texas, said Jack Beven, a hurricane specialist at the National Hurricane Center in Miami. He cautioned it was too early to make a precise prediction.

In Cancun, hundreds of buses moved more than 25,000 tourists, many clutching pillows, to temporary shelters, part of the nearly 60,000 people being evacuated from resort towns like Tulum and Playa de Carmen.

Cancun’s airport closed Sunday afternoon after thousands lined up at ticket counters, trying to get flights out before the storm hit.

By late afternoon, heavy winds tugged at palm trees and sent the last people at the beach running for their cars.

One Cancun resident, 23-year-old Christopher Espinoza, braved howling bursts of wind to look out over the pounding surf. “The waves are already starting to take away part of the beach,” he said.

Hundreds of mostly foreign tourists lay shoulder-to-shoulder on thin foam pads in a sweltering gymnasium near the center of Cancun, one of Mexico’s most popular tourist destinations known for its white-sand beaches, sprawling hotel complexes and all-night discos.

Cancun’s mayor, Francisco Alor, said the city was preparing for a near-direct hit by Emily.

“This hurricane is coming with the same force as Gilbert,” he said referring to the notorious 1988 hurricane that killed 300 people in Mexico and the Caribbean.

The city’s last big evacuation was for Gilbert. But in 1988, the city and surrounding resort areas had only about 8,000 hotel rooms. That number has since grown to over 50,000.

In Jamaica, torrential rains drenched the south coast and washed away at least three houses, while a man, a woman, an infant boy and his 5-year-old sister were swept away in a car Saturday night. Searchers on Sunday found the four bodies trapped inside the car, which was filled with mud and other debris, police said.

The Cayman Islands escaped major damage Saturday. The islands and a handful of other Caribbean countries were devastated last year when three catastrophic hurricanes – Frances, Ivan and Jeanne – tore through the region with a collective ferocity not seen in years, causing hundreds of deaths and billions of dollars in damage.