Nicaragua and Honduras
are on high alert due to the approach to their coasts of Iota, the 13th hurricane of the current Atlantic season that is already
category 3
and is rapidly strengthening, according to the National Hurricane Center (NHC, in English).
It is expected to hit an area of the coast between these two countries on Monday night as a Category 4 hurricane.
Both countries, as well as Guatemala and southern Mexico, have just been hit hard by Eta, which also reached the same area as a Category 4 hurricane and caused hundreds of deaths and catastrophic damage.
The area in which Iota is expected to make landfall is between
northeastern Nicaragua and the part of Honduras
immediately adjacent to that area.
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Iota has maximum sustained winds of 125 miles per hour
(200 kilometers per hour), but NHC meteorologists predict that by the time it reaches land it will be even more powerful, causing "catastrophic" winds, dangerous storm surges and "extreme" rains in the affected areas.
Before, it is expected to pass through the island of Providencia, from which it was only separated by about 45 miles (km) at about 1 am this Monday, East Coast time, according to the NHC.
The island, which belongs to Colombia, is under a hurricane alert.
Multiple people wade through a flooded road on Thursday, November 5, 2020 after the passage of Hurricane Eta, in Planeta, Honduras.
(AP Photo / Delmer Martínez) AP
In Tegucigalpa, the Honduran capital, Saturday and Sunday have been days of many people supplying in supermarkets, in the face of the impending emergency.
"We don't know what will happen, that's why we are supplying ourselves with food and water
," teacher Enrique Cáceres, who lives in the Morazán neighborhood, told the Efe news agency, crossed by a stream that causes damage to the area when it floods.
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Honduras is also suffering another emergency, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which has left more than 2,800 dead, while infections exceed 102,000.
While it was still a storm, Iota had already reached the record as the 30th named storm of this extraordinary Atlantic hurricane season.
The myriad of phenomena like this have focused attention on
climate change,
which scientists say is causing wetter, stronger and more destructive systems.
Iota threatens to
leave more destruction
in a region where people continue to deal with the devastation of Eta.
This meteor struck Nicaragua just a week ago as a Category 4 hurricane, killing
at least 120 people
as torrential rains caused flooding and landslides in parts of Central America and Mexico.
It then passed through Cuba, the Florida Keys, and the Gulf of Mexico before making landfall again at Cedar Key, Florida, and hitting Florida and the Carolinas.
With information from EFE