Tuesday, December 8, 2015

Tropical cyclone dumping years' worth of rain on war-torn Yemen in one day

http://www.cnn.com/2015/11/03/middleeast/yemen-tropical-cyclone-chapala/index.html


Ravaged by months of war, Yemen has now been battered by the first tropical storm on record to make landfall in the impoverished Arab country.
Tropical Cyclone Chapala slammed into Yemen's central coast early Tuesday, lashing the area with maximum sustained winds of around 140 kph (85 mph).
But the major concern is the extraordinary volume of rain the storm system is expected to dump on the country's dry, rugged terrain, bringing a severe threat of mudslides.
Yemen typically gets around 100 millimeters (4 inches) of rain per year. Chapala was forecast to unleash two to three times that amount in the space of just one day. 

The deluge is likely to cause "massive debris flows and flash flooding," CNN meteorologist Tom Sater warned.
The storm made landfall not far from Al Mukalla, a port that al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula seized earlier this year amid the chaotic conflict engulfing Yemen.
Images from the city and surrounding Hadramout province showed streets and vehicles submerged by torrents of muddy brown flood water.
"The damage is enormous and we fear human losses," Minister of Fisheries Fahd Kafain told Agence France-Presse.


 Tropical Cyclone Chapala batters Mukalla, Yemen, on Monday, November 2, 2015.

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