Hurricane Gonzalo pounds Bermuda with 110mph winds

Tempest scores direct hit on British territory, knocking out the majority of the island’s electricity but causing no fatalities

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A satellite image showing Gonzalo heading north towards Bermuda on 17 October 2014. Photograph: NOAA/EPA

Hurricane Gonzalo crushed trees, flattened power lines and damaged Bermuda’s main hospital in an hours-long battering but the tiny, wealthy British territory suffered no deaths.

The storm’s centre crossed over Bermuda on Friday night and Gonzalo quickly moved northward over the Atlantic on a track that could take it just off the shore of Newfoundland in Canada.

“This was a dangerous hurricane, but Bermuda today is dealing with property damage, blocked roads and a loss of electricity, all things that can be replaced and restored,” said Premier Michael Dunkley. “Thankfully, there has been no loss of life.”

He said the US, UK and others had offered assistance.

The hospital, which suffered a damaged roof, was still operating, and bulldozers were clearing trees from roads as crews worked to restore power to some 24,000 homes. Police Commissioner Michael DeSilva said many roads were impassible and urged people to stay home, warning on the island’s Emergency Broadcast Station that motorists would be turned back.

“Unless it’s a life or death emergency – checking on your boat is not an emergency – we won’t let you pass,” he said.

Gonzalo approached Bermuda as a Category 3 storm then weakened to Category 2 strength just before coming ashore with sustained winds of 110mph. Some Bermudians woke up to toppled concrete walls, uprooted palm trees and boats run aground. The Royal Gazette newspaper reported that part of the roof of the island’s legislature, the House of Assembly, was ripped off.

Flooding was the main concern on Bermuda, which has one of the highest per-capita incomes in the world and is known for strict building codes meant to ensure homes can withstand sustained winds of at least 110 mph.

The last major hurricane to strike Bermuda was Fabian in September 2003. That Category 3 storm killed four people and caused more than $100m in damage.

The island was still recovering from last weekend’s blast from Tropical Storm Fay, which also damaged homes and toppled power lines.

“To be struck twice by two different cyclones is unusual, to say the least,” said Max Mayfield, a former director of the US National Hurricane Center in Miami.

A frigate of Britain’s Royal Navy with a crew of some 180 sailors was expected to arrive on Sunday to help with post-storm recovery efforts.

The US National Hurricane Center said Gonzalo weakened as it moved away from Bermuda on a track that would take it past Newfoundland and then across the Atlantic to Britain and Ireland. Canadian Hurricane Center officials said the storm isn’t expected to be a hurricane as it nears Canadian waters, but there was a 30% chance it would make landfall as a post-tropical storm overnight on Saturday. Officials said there could be some flooding if it arrived at high tide early on Sunday.

Across the Atlantic, Britain’s Met Office issued an alert for strong winds and heavy rain expected on Tuesday from the remains of Gonzalo. It warned of potential significant disruption of travel and difficult driving conditions.

The storm earlier claimed one life in the Dutch territory of St Maarten and the hurricane centre said it could still whip up dangerous surf on portions of the US coast.

In the Pacific, recently formed Tropical Storm Trudy was centered over land about 75 miles east-northeast of Acapulco, and it was dumping heavy rains. Maximum sustained winds were 40mph, the hurricane centre said.

Meanwhile, Hurricane Ana was carving a path south of Hawaii, producing high waves, strong winds and heavy rains that prompted a flood advisory. The center of the storm was about 155 miles southwest of the Big Island and about 190 miles from Honolulu, the National Weather Service said.

There was little chance for hurricane conditions on the islands, but a tropical storm watch remained in effect throughout the archipelago and the strongest winds were about 80mph.

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