From what I can ascertain Cyclone Chapala is due to make landfall in the next few hours
Yemen island hit as Cyclone Chapala heads for mainland
BBC,
2
October, 2015
A
rare tropical cyclone has hit the remote Yemeni island of Socotra,
killing at least one person before heading towards the Yemeni
mainland.
Many
residents took shelter in schools and caves as the storm, named
Chapala, brought hurricane-force winds, heavy rain and powerful waves
to the island.
Photos
and videos posted online showed water flowing through the streets of
the provincial capital, Hadibu.
It
is believed to be the most powerful storm that Yemen has seen in
decades.
The
UN's World Meteorological Organisation described the cyclone as
"extremely severe", and said that sea conditions around the
centre of the storm were "phenomenal".
Media
captionYemen braces for a powerful cyclone with hurricane force winds
and life-threatening torrential rain. BBC Weather's Ben Rich has the
latest forecast.
At
12:00 GMT on Monday, the US Navy's Joint Typhoon Warning Centre
(JTWC) reported that Chapala was generating gusts of up to 240km/h
(150mph), equivalent to a category 4 hurricane.
The
storm is forecast to make landfall just west of the city of Mukalla,
on the south coast of the Yemeni mainland, between 00:00 GMT and
12:00 GMT on Tuesday, when gusts of up to 140 km/h (85mph) are
expected.
The
JTWC said Chapala would begin to weaken as dry air emanating from the
Arabian Peninsula eroded the storm system, and that it would rapidly
decay after landfall mainly due to the interaction with the rugged
and dry Yemeni terrain.
The
cyclone could nevertheless deluge parts of the country with up to
500mm (20in) of rain in two days - 10 times the annual average.
Socotra
is situated 368km (230 miles) south of the coast of Yemen in the
Arabian Sea, to the east of Somalia.
It
is home to about 50,000 people, who speak their own language, and
hundreds of exotic plant species found nowhere else on earth,
including dragon's blood trees.
The
mayor of Hadibu, Salem Zaher, told the AFP news agency that Chapala
had damaged more than 80 houses and left hundreds of people needing
hospital treatment.
More
than 1,000 families had been evacuated and resettled in schools and
camps inland before the storm hit, he added.
Residents
of Mukalla, which has been controlled by a tribal council and
jihadist militants from al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP)
since April, meanwhile expressed concern about local preparations for
when Chapala made landfall.
"The
sea water level has risen by 9m (29ft) and has destroyed the Mukalla
seafront," resident Mohammed Ba Zuhair told the Reuters news
agency.
"Many
people have left their homes and are seeking refuge in schools. No
relief or aid efforts are under way by either the tribal council or
al-Qaeda, and the situation is really bad."
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