Hurricane Wilma slams jewel of Mexico’s tourism
Hurricane Wilma slammed into Mexico’s Yucatan peninsula Friday with huge waves and severe winds, flooding streets, washing away beaches and damaging hotels in the popular tourist region.
Huge waves pounded the coast and hotels were evacuated in the resort city of Cancun, where local reports said streets were under water. The storm, with winds of 220 kilometres an hour, was expected to linger over Yucatan for up to 24 hours, U.S. forecasters said.
On Cozumel island, a tourist spot about 60 kilometres south of Cancun where hotels have been emptied, the hurricane mangled beach restaurants, uprooted trees, toppled power poles and damaged coral reefs.
The U.S. National Hurricane Centre rated Wilma an ‘extremely dangerous’ Category 4 storm - one below the top speed level.
Next in its path was Cuba, where heavy rains set off by the hurricane’s fringes led authorities to evacuate nearly 400,000 people, including 250,000 in the capital Havana, to get them away from possible mudslides and flooding.



