Where Is Wilma Headed?
Powerful Hurricane Pounds Caribbean But Future Path Remains Unknown
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Play CBS Video Video Wilma Tremendously Strong Web Exclusive: Brian Norcross reports that hurricane Wilma is throwing forecasters for a loop, but what is known is that Wilma will pack a mighty punch.
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Video Worrisome Wilma Hurricane Wilma might slam southwestern Florida with a storm surge that could be as high as 25 feet. Jim Acosta reports from Punta Gorda, where residents are still recovering from Hurricane Charley.
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Video Cayman Islands On Alert CBS News RAW: The Cayman Islands in the Caribbean are on high alert, as Hurricane Wilma swirled into the most intense Atlantic storm ever recorded.
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Max Mayfield, director of the National Hurricane Center, right, points to the satellite weather map as City of Sweetwater Mayor Manny Marono, second from left, and Police Chief Robert Fulguiera, left, listen Wednesday, Oct. 19, 2005 in Miami. (AP)
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Infrared satellite image of Hurricane Wilma in the Gulf of Mexico nearing the Yucatan Peninsula (AP)
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Residents of Havana get ready to gas up and go. (AP)
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Palm tree on Grand Cayman sways as Hurricane Wilma approaches (video still). (AP /APTN)
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Interactive Storm Tracker Follow all the storms of the 2009 season with satellite images, warnings and wind speed charts.
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Photo Essay Images Of Wilma Wilma packed a punch for Florida after cutting a swath of destruction through Mexican resort cities.
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With heavy rain, high winds, and rough seas already pounding coastal areas, flood-prone Honduras warned that Wilma posed "an imminent threat to life and property." The country closed two Caribbean ports.
The closest land to Wilma's eye were the nearly uninhabited Swan Islands, once used by the CIA for propaganda broadcasts to Cuba. They were 35 miles west of the storm's center.
The head of Haiti's civil protection agency, Maria Alta Jean-Baptiste, said rains associated with Wilma caused floods and landslides that killed at least 11 people since Monday. At least 2,000 families were forced from flooded homes.
Jean-Baptiste later said she received unconfirmed reports that two more people drowned Wednesday while trying to cross a river that overflowed its banks in the southern town of Les Anglais.
Cuban authorities suspended classes in the western province of Pinar del Rio and prepared to evacuate tourists from campgrounds and low-lying areas, according to Granma, the Communist daily. More than 1,000 people were evacuated in the island's eastern Granma province.
With preservation of lives its first priority, Cuba always evacuates before the advent of hurricanes, with most evacuees going to the homes of relatives or friends and the remainder to government run shelters, reports CBS News' Portia Siegelbaum.
Jamaica, where heavy rain has fallen since Sunday, closed almost all schools and 350 people were living in shelters. One man died Sunday in a rain-swollen river.
A military helicopter plucked 19 people from rooftops Tuesday in St. Catherine parish, where some areas were flooded with up to 7 feet of water, said Barbara Carby, head of Jamaica's emergency management office.
"The problem is that with the level of saturation, it doesn't take much more rain for flooding to occur, so we still have to remain very much on alert," she said.
Prime Minister P.J. Patterson ordered the military to make emergency food shipments to stranded residents.
In the Cayman Islands, schools and most businesses were closed as heavy rains fell intermittently. About 1,000 residents lost power.
The storm was expected to dump up to 25 inches of rain in mountainous areas of Cuba, and up to 15 inches in the Caymans and Jamaica. Up to 12 inches were possible from Honduras to the Yucatan peninsula, the U.S. weather service said.
Forecasters said Wilma was stronger than the Labor Day hurricane that hit the Florida Keys in 1935, the most powerful Atlantic hurricane to make landfall on record.
But disruptive high-altitude winds in the Gulf of Mexico should weaken Wilma before landfall, said Hugh Cobb, a meteorologist at the hurricane center.
Wilma's track could take it near Punta Gorda on Florida's southwestern Gulf Coast and other areas hit by Hurricane Charley, a Category 4 storm, in August 2004.
The state has seen seven hurricanes hit or pass close by since then, causing more than $20 billion in damage and killing nearly 150 people.
Forecasters said Wilma should avoid the central Gulf coast ravaged by Katrina and Rita. Those storms killed more than 1,200 people.
Wilma is the record-tying 12th hurricane of the Atlantic season, the same number reached in 1969. Records have been kept since 1851. On Monday, Wilma became the Atlantic hurricane season's 21st named storm, tying the record set in 1933 and exhausting the list of names for this year.
The six-month hurricane season ends Nov. 30. Any new storms would be named with letters from the Greek alphabet, starting with Alpha.
©MMV CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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