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"We've got three of them on the way. We've just got to be prepared," said Frank Augustine, a 47-year convenience store manager, as he bought 10 five-gallon water jugs under blue skies at a Nassau depot. Early Thursday, Hanna was centered about 295 miles (480 kilometers) east-southeast of Nassau. The hurricane center said Hanna was moving toward the northwest near 12 mph (19 kph) and could become a hurricane by Friday. Only a few dozen of the Bahamas' roughly 700 islands are inhabited, but they are near sea level and have little natural protection. In the south, Hanna knocked out electricity in Mayaguana Island and forced the closure of some small airports including those in Long Island and Acklins Island. The storm was expected to pass near or over the central Bahamas on Thursday before reaching hurricane strength. But the hurricane center warned its reach was expanding, with tropical-storm force winds extending up to 290 miles (465 kilometers) from the center. "Hanna has become a large tropical cyclone," the hurricane center said. Long-range forecasts called for the storm to hit anywhere from Georgia to North Carolina on Saturday and curve along the U.S. Atlantic coast. The storm has drenched the Turks and Caicos and Puerto Rico but wreaked the most havoc in storm-weary Haiti, where it flooded the western city of Gonaives.
[Associated
Press;
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