Hurricane Rina threatens 颁补苍肠煤苍 and the rest of Mexico's Yucat谩n Peninsula
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Mexico鈥檚 premier resort town, 颁补苍肠煤苍, hunkered down Wednesday, as Hurricane Rina gathered strength and menaced the island of Cozumel and the coast of the Yucat谩n Peninsula.
It was expected to hit Cozumel Wednesday before moving toward the Caribbean coast and onwards to 颁补苍肠煤苍, a tourist area popular across the globe, but especially for American travelers.
The tourism director of the Mexican state of Quintana Roo told the Associated Press that currently there are about 83,000 tourists in the state. There are some 1,700 in Cozumel, which could be the hardest hit.
Along the stretch of beach, authorities set up emergency shelters and soldiers and marines evacuated fishing communities, while hotel owners boarded up windows and prepared for a loss of electricity. Cruise ships were also re-routed away from this stretch of the Caribbean to avoid storm surges.
Some were unconcerned. Roberto Martinez, who works at a bank in Mexico City and was en route to 颁补苍肠煤苍 for a business trip, says the weather was not going to stop his plans. 鈥淎s I have never experienced a hurricane, I am not nervous,鈥 he says. In fact, he moved up his trip to make sure he did not get stuck in Mexico City.
Rina is currently a Category 2 storm, with winds at 110 mph on Wednesday morning, the US National Hurricane Center reported.
颁补苍肠煤苍 was hit with Hurricane Wilma six years ago, and the beaches have never recovered. Many beaches were washed away; hotel owners have instead built board walks that jut out from their hotels so that tourists can at least be near the water.
Heavy rains could prove problematic, not just for the resort area but further towards the Gulf. The state of Tabasco has been suffering from floods.