The Prague Post - Strong winds hit Bermuda as Hurricane Fiona heads for Canada

EUR -
AED 4.247186
AFN 75.752119
ALL 92.229833
AMD 442.609442
ANG 2.070085
AOA 1060.495823
ARS 1664.751063
AUD 1.765325
AWG 2.084562
AZN 1.96211
BAM 1.951242
BBD 2.330456
BDT 141.399716
BGN 1.955105
BHD 0.435998
BIF 3423.191643
BMD 1.156484
BND 1.504193
BOB 7.995186
BRL 6.219101
BSD 1.157097
BTN 102.541708
BWP 15.505514
BYN 3.944104
BYR 22667.079801
BZD 2.327124
CAD 1.617302
CDF 2590.523618
CHF 0.928234
CLF 0.02778
CLP 1089.800422
CNY 8.22335
CNH 8.225519
COP 4464.258237
CRC 581.142556
CUC 1.156484
CUP 30.646817
CVE 110.617353
CZK 24.339936
DJF 205.530269
DKK 7.466802
DOP 74.127063
DZD 150.475839
EGP 54.621766
ERN 17.347255
ETB 177.953875
FJD 2.623656
FKP 0.873343
GBP 0.879361
GEL 3.1341
GGP 0.873343
GHS 12.548307
GIP 0.873343
GMD 83.842174
GNF 10032.49618
GTQ 8.867326
GYD 242.070381
HKD 8.986074
HNL 30.380792
HRK 7.533563
HTG 151.406342
HUF 388.34201
IDR 19255.163873
ILS 3.762787
IMP 0.873343
INR 102.503021
IQD 1514.993599
IRR 48659.049852
ISK 144.860757
JEP 0.873343
JMD 184.918065
JOD 0.819928
JPY 178.252876
KES 149.41871
KGS 101.134357
KHR 4650.220584
KMF 489.193151
KPW 1040.853295
KRW 1655.761213
KWD 0.354891
KYD 0.964231
KZT 613.665975
LAK 25095.695627
LBP 103563.111899
LKR 351.998012
LRD 212.156794
LSL 19.787681
LTL 3.414796
LVL 0.699545
LYD 6.285539
MAD 10.658734
MDL 19.640783
MGA 5221.524014
MKD 61.594956
MMK 2427.752737
MNT 4167.596484
MOP 9.257416
MRU 46.357592
MUR 52.65504
MVR 17.697547
MWK 2008.228091
MXN 21.419257
MYR 4.854338
MZN 73.905761
NAD 19.787641
NGN 1678.705601
NIO 42.501035
NOK 11.621851
NPR 164.066932
NZD 2.013587
OMR 0.444666
PAB 1.157277
PEN 3.921062
PGK 4.897997
PHP 68.037105
PKR 324.914176
PLN 4.244653
PYG 8193.860623
QAR 4.210766
RON 5.084481
RSD 117.204975
RUB 92.462494
RWF 1677.479554
SAR 4.337139
SBD 9.518545
SCR 16.977017
SDG 695.619707
SEK 10.913106
SGD 1.503909
SHP 0.867662
SLE 26.772227
SLL 24250.883633
SOS 695.635878
SRD 44.819541
STD 23936.876899
STN 24.690926
SVC 10.124351
SYP 12786.986394
SZL 19.787524
THB 37.425545
TJS 10.650738
TMT 4.047693
TND 3.395449
TOP 2.708598
TRY 48.539637
TTD 7.833668
TWD 35.515555
TZS 2844.786746
UAH 48.56097
UGX 4025.596934
USD 1.156484
UYU 46.162174
UZS 13883.586088
VES 253.676253
VND 30450.214855
VUV 140.694854
WST 3.226811
XAF 654.431196
XAG 0.023725
XAU 0.000289
XCD 3.125455
XCG 2.085293
XDR 0.810055
XOF 651.674176
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.823907
ZAR 19.982477
ZMK 10409.74147
ZMW 25.541897
ZWL 372.387268
  • RYCEF

    0.0500

    15.45

    +0.32%

  • CMSC

    -0.2110

    24.108

    -0.88%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    79

    0%

  • SCS

    0.1100

    16

    +0.69%

  • RIO

    -0.7180

    72.18

    -0.99%

  • VOD

    0.0550

    11.955

    +0.46%

  • RELX

    -0.6050

    44.36

    -1.36%

  • BCC

    -0.6530

    69.967

    -0.93%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.85

    +0.14%

  • CMSD

    -0.2390

    24.346

    -0.98%

  • BCE

    -0.6250

    23.16

    -2.7%

  • GSK

    2.2300

    47.075

    +4.74%

  • BP

    -0.2630

    35.022

    -0.75%

  • NGG

    1.0500

    76.09

    +1.38%

  • AZN

    0.3400

    82.57

    +0.41%

  • BTI

    -0.6700

    51.345

    -1.3%

Strong winds hit Bermuda as Hurricane Fiona heads for Canada
Strong winds hit Bermuda as Hurricane Fiona heads for Canada / Photo: Handout - AFP

Strong winds hit Bermuda as Hurricane Fiona heads for Canada

Bermuda assessed damage Friday after Hurricane Fiona brushed past the island overnight, causing flooding and leaving most of the population without power as it set course for Canada.

Text size:

Hurricane conditions were expected to hit Nova Scotia province by evening, with the US National Hurricane Center saying Fiona had again strengthened to a Category 4 storm as "it races toward Atlantic Canada."

Emergency officials in Bermuda called on residents to remain inside as strong winds raked over the British territory, which was buffeted by gusts of more than 100 miles (160 kilometers) per hour and pounding seas.

But no fatalities or major damage were reported as Fiona passed roughly 100 miles to the west of the island.

The Belco power company said 29,000 out of 36,000 households were without power.

"We are not in the clear. Stay off the roads," Premier David Burt tweeted, adding no major incidents were reported.

The Royal Bermuda Regiment and Belco said they were waiting for winds to die down before clearing roads and restoring power.

Residents posted images of downed power lines and some flooding on social media.

"This morning (it is) very windy outside. We had some minor damage to the premises but nothing serious," Jason Rainer, owner of a souvenir shop in the capital Hamilton told AFP, saying some doors and windows had been blown out.

Store owners had covered windows with metal and wood sheets.

The island of about 64,000 people is no stranger to hurricanes -- but it is also tiny, just 21 square miles (54 square kilometers), and one of the most remote places in the world, 640 miles from its closest neighbor, the United States.

- A well-prepared island -

"You have to live with it because you live here, you can't run anywhere because it's just a little island," said JoeAnn Scott, a shopworker in Hamilton.

Bermudians try to "enjoy it as it comes," she said. "And pray and pray. That's what we do, pray and party," she added with a laugh.

At Bermuda's famed Horseshoe Bay Beach, onlookers watched pounding waves on Thursday before the storm hit, while two kitesurfers risked extreme conditions out at sea.

Because of the island's isolation, preparations are taken seriously.

Many boats were taken out of the water earlier in the week, public schools were closed, buses and ferries stopped and an emergency shelter opened.

In addition to laying in supplies of candles and food, some Bermudians drew buckets of water and filled bathtubs from the tanks at the side of their homes ahead of the expected power outages.

There is no fresh water source on the island, so all buildings have white, lime-washed roofs that are used to catch rainwater in tanks that is then pumped into homes.

Bermuda, whose economy is fueled by international finance and tourism, is wealthy compared to most Caribbean countries, and structures must be built to strict planning codes to withstand storms. Some have done so for centuries.

"The construction is really built to last, and we don't see the devastation ever that the Caribbean has experienced over the years," resident Elaine Murray said.

Fiona killed four people in Puerto Rico earlier this week, according to US media, while one death was reported in the French overseas department of Guadeloupe and another in the Dominican Republic.

President Joe Biden has declared a state of emergency in Puerto Rico, a US territory that is still struggling to recover from Hurricane Maria five years ago.

In the Dominican Republic, President Luis Abinader declared three eastern provinces to be disaster zones.

N.Kratochvil--TPP