Emily breaks up over Haiti, still threatens rains

PORT-AU-PRINCE, (Reuters) – Tropical Storm Emily  broke apart over the mountains of Haiti and Dominican Republic  yesterday but its remnants still packed rains threatening  flash floods and mudslides in the neighboring Caribbean  countries.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center said the storm  dissipated into a low pressure trough, but cautioned it still  had “some” potential to regenerate on Friday or Saturday.     This meant Florida’s authorities would be watching the  weather system to ensure it did not re-strengthen into a threat  to the state’s eastern coast.

The remnants of Emily were located 100 miles (160 km)  south-southwest of the eastern tip of Cuba at 5:00 p.m. (2100  GMT), the Miami-based center said. Emily had been the fifth  named storm of the 2011 Atlantic hurricane season. Its remaining clouds and thunderstorms were moving  northwest across the Caribbean. The governments of the  Dominican Republic, Cuba and the Bahamas all dropped tropical  storm watches and warnings after it weakened.

The hurricane center warned rainfall could still reach as  much as 20 inches (50 cm) in parts of Haiti and Dominican  Republic.

Heavy rainfall is a significant threat to Haiti, which is  vulnerable to flash floods and landslides because of its  near-total deforestation. In June, at least 23 people were  killed after rains unleashed flooding and mudslides.

Occasional light rains fell yesterday in the sprawling,  mountain-cradled Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince, where more  than 600,000 survivors of the 2010 earthquake still live in  fragile tent and tarpaulin camps.

Haitian President Michel Martelly and civil defense  officials had issued public appeals for those living in  low-lying or flood-prone areas of the hilly, quake-damaged  capital to move to safer areas and not wait to be evacuated.Emily posed no threat to oil and gas production facilities  in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico. Some tracking forecasts had earlier  showed it crossing the Bahamas and possibly approaching Florida  by the weekend.

Yesterday, NOAA raised its outlook for activity in the  2011 Atlantic hurricane season, predicting it would produce 7  to 10 hurricanes.