Hurricane Lili (1996)

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Hurricane Lili
Category 3 hurricane (SSHS)
Hurricane Lili at Category 3 status over the Bahamas

Hurricane Lili at Category 3 status over the Bahamas
Formed October 14, 1996
Dissipated October 29, 1996
Highest
winds
115 mph (185 km/h) (1-minute sustained)
Lowest pressure 960 mbar (hPa; 28.36 inHg)
Fatalities 10
Damage ≥ $660 million (1996 USD)
≥ $910 million (2008 USD)
Areas
affected
Central America, Cuba, Bahamas, Ireland, Great Britain
Part of the
1996 Atlantic hurricane season

Hurricane Lili, a Category 3 hurricane during the 1996 Atlantic hurricane season, caused considerable damage across Central America, Cuba, and the Bahamas, and left $300 million (1996 US dollars) in damage in Great Britain.

Contents

[edit] Storm history

Storm path
Storm path

A tropical depression formed off the coast of Nicaragua on October 14, and moved slowly to the northwest. On October 16, it reached tropical storm strength and was named Lili. The storm reached hurricane strength on the 17th. Lili grazed the Isle of Youth on October 18 and then hit Matanzas Province, Cuba as a Category 2 hurricane. Despite the mountainous terrain, the storm barely weakened and Lili emerged over water twelve hours later on Cuba's northern coast. Lili further strengthened as it approached the Bahamas. The eye passed over San Salvador Island and Great Exuma on the 19th before heading out into the North Atlantic. Over open water, Lili briefly reached Category 3 strength before being declared extratropical. The remnants of Lili maintained tropical storm force winds as it crossed Ireland and Great Britain on October 28.

[edit] Impact

Lili killed ten people: eight in Central America and two in Great Britain. Damage figures for Central America and the Bahamas are unavailable but there was $662 million (1996 US dollars) in damages in Cuba and Great Britain.

[edit] United States

Lili's rainfall in Florida
Lili's rainfall in Florida

Storm surge caused $150,000 (1996 USD) along the coast of New Hampshire. Florida received up to a foot of rain in the days preceding Lili's passage as a frontal zone on its northern periphery led to moderate to heavy rainfall mainly along the Gold coast.[1] Some areas of New England received up to 13 inches (330 mm) of rain in Rockingham County when a frontal zone drew moisture northward from the well-offshore hurricane.[2]

[edit] Cuba

Lili's strong winds and heavy rains forced the closing of José Martí International Airport in Havana; 247,000 people evacuated. Up to 747 mm/29.41 inches of rain fell across the island.[3] In Isla de la Juventud, the winds plucked some 16,000 tons of grapefruit and oranges from trees while 20-foot (6.1 m) waves swept beach-side cottages out to sea. In Villa Clara, all 28 sugar refineries were severely damaged. In Old Havana, dozens of old, poorly built buildings simply collapsed in the storm's fury. The storm destroyed 2,300 buildings while damaging another 47,000. Much of the sugar, banana, coffee, and citrus harvests were ruined. Total damages were estimated at $362 million (1996 USD)[4]. There were no deaths.

[edit] Bahamas

Damage estimates were unavailable but reports state that damage was considerable.[citation needed]

[edit] Great Britain

On the October 28 and October 29, 1996, Great Britain was hammered by what The Times called "arrival from America of Hurricane Lili." Lili produced a 92 mph gust at Swansea, South Wales, while bringing a four foot storm surge that inundated the River Thames. In Somerset, 500 holiday cottages were severely damaged. A United States oil drilling platform, under tow in the North Sea, broke loose during the storm and nearly ran aground at Peterhead. On the Isle of Wight, a sailing boat was beached at Chale Bay; luckily all five occupants were rescued. The most damaging storm to have struck Great Britain since the Great Storm of 1987, Lili killed two people and left £150 million (1996 pounds) ($300 million in 1996 US dollars) in damage. The storm also broke a four-month drought over southwest England.

[edit] Aftermath

[edit] Political fallout

Criticism followed after Hurricane Lili, mainly the disaster relief in Cuba. Many Cuban exiles debated on whether to get involved with the disaster relief. On issues involving Cuba and the exile community, offering disaster relief is an emotional decision fraught with political implications.[5]

Things became more complicated when two rescue planes were allegedly shot down and anti-Castro radio stations urging listeners to withhold relief money. Tomas Garcia-Fuste, WCMQ programming director said it violates the Helms-Burton Act, which penalizes companies that do business with Cuba. Fuste also said Castro purposely exaggerated the damage done by the hurricane -- to get exiles to send much-needed food and medicine that they normally would not send. He and other advocates feared that Castro's government will steal the supplies.[5]

[edit] Foreign aid

President Bill Clinton approved humanitarian aid to the Cuban victims through the Catholic church.[6]

[edit] Comparisons

The fallout from Hurricane Lili was similar to the fallout from Hurricane Flora of 1963, Hurricane Charley of 2004, as well as Hurricanes Dennis and Katrina of 2005. Political and historic tension and between the communist government and the exiles and U.S. had hampered relief efforts and aid to the victims. "Don't let politics blind you from helping us", said one victim.[6]

[edit] Lack of retirement

Because the damage was not extreme, the name Lili was not retired so it was used again in the 2002 season. Hurricane Lili was retired after the 2002 season and it was replaced by Laura for the 2008 season.

[edit] See also

[edit] Sources

[edit] World Wide Web

  1. ^ David Roth. Hurricane Lili Rainfall Page. Retrieved on 2007-04-23.
  2. ^ NOAA Satellite and Information Service. Event Record Details. Retrieved on 2007-04-23.
  3. ^ Instituto Nacional de Recursos Hidráulicos (2003). Lluvias intensas observadas y grandes inundaciones reportadas (Spanish). Retrieved on 2007-02-10.
  4. ^ Roger A. Pielke, Jr., Jose Rubiera, Christopher Landsea, Mario L. Fernandez, and Roberta Klein. Hurricane Vulnerability in Latin America and the Caribbean: Normalized Damage and Loss Potentials. Retrieved on 2007-04-23.
  5. ^ a b MANNY GARCIA. Lively debate on disaster relief for Cuba. Retrieved on 2007-04-23.
  6. ^ a b Ulises Cabrera. LILI: THE CUBAN PEOPLE FACE A NEW CHALLENGE. Retrieved on 2007-04-23.

[edit] Printed Media

  • David Longshore. "Cuba: 1996, Hurricane Lili." Encyclopedia of Hurricanes, Typhoons and Cyclones. David Longshore. New York: Facts on File, 1998, Pg; 81.
  • David Longshore. "Europe: Hurricane Lili." Encyclopedia of Hurricanes, Typhoons and Cyclones. David Longshore. New York: Facts on File, 1998, Pg; 116.

[edit] External links

Tropical cyclones of the 1996 Atlantic hurricane season
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Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale
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