Hurricane Gustav is the seventh tropical cyclone and third hurricane of the 2008 Atlantic hurricane season. It formed on the morning of August 25, about 260 miles (415 km) southeast of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, and rapidly strengthened into a tropical storm that afternoon and into a hurricane early on August 26. Later that day it made landfall near the Haitian town of Jacmel. Twenty-two deaths have been blamed on Gustav.
Hurricane Gustav re-gained a pronounced eye as it made landfall on Haiti, near the town of Jacmel. As the hurricane moved over Haiti's mountainous terrain its circulation was disrupted and it lost a little strength.Although downgraded to a tropical storm, the system still had a pronounced eye in its mid- and upper-level structures. Its outflow improved throughout the night of August 26 and the system was not very disrupted when it moved back over water into the Gulf of GonĂ¢ve.However, the storm's movement slowed, and continued interraction with nearby Haiti, combined with the incursion of mid-level dry air from the northeast, resulted in further weakening during the day on August 27.The storm began a west-southwesterly movement that brought it closer to Jamaica. The morning of August 28, it was found that Gustav had either reformed further to the south or had moved further towards the south overnight than previously thought. The storm was also found to have restrengthened to nearly hurricane strength.

World news : Tropical Storm Gustav took in a new track???

MIAMI (AFP) - Tropical Storm Gustav took a turn on Thursday, moving south as it crept toward Jamaica in a new track that could spare the hurricane-scarred US city of New Orleans.

Gustav reformed to the south early Thursday and became "a little stronger," blowing winds of 85 kilometers per hour (50 miles), the US National Hurricane Center said in its latest advisory.

The eye of the storm, which already left 22 people dead in Haiti and the Dominican Republic, was expected to pass "very close" to Jamaica later Thursday, the US National Hurricane Center said.

Gustav, which struck Haiti as a Category One hurricane on Tuesday, could regain hurricane strength by Friday, the center warned.

Its new position has it passing south of Jamaica as a tropical storm and reaching Grand Cayman Island as a hurricane later in the week before passing between Mexico's Yucatan peninsula and Cuba's western tip, the center said.

The revised forecast also predicts that Gustav could reach Louisiana on Tuesday instead of Monday, making landfall in the central coast rather than the east, where the New Orleans lies.

The tropical storm pushed oil prices higher Wednesday on fears that the storm could strike rigs when it moves to the Gulf of Mexico.

At 0900 GMT, the storm was about 130 kilometers (80 miles) east of Kingston and 270 kilometers (170 miles) south of Guantanamo, Cuba, the center said.

With memories of the devastation caused by Hurricane Katrina in 2005 still fresh, US federal and Louisiana state authorities prepared for the worst to avoid repeating the slow disaster response of three years ago.

Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal declared a state of emergency Wednesday and announced plans to begin evacuating coastal areas ahead of the storm.

"As long as there is a chance that we'll be in this storm, I'll be here in Louisiana," said Jindal, warning he may miss next week's Republican National Convention to name John McCain the party's presidential nominee.

The US Department of Homeland Security urged Gulf Coast residents to get ready for the storm.

"Regardless of its predicted path, it is important for citizens in the Gulf Coast region to listen to what their local officials are advising over the course of the next few days and to take these simple steps to prepare," said Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff.

New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin, who was criticized for his administration's botched response to Katrina, made plans to leave the Democratic National Convention early so he could also help the city prepare for the storm.

Jamaica and the tiny Cayman Islands, a British overseas territory, were under a hurricane watch.

But Jamaican tourism interests did not expect any fall out.

Josef Forstmayer, an executive of the Jamaica Hotel and Tourism Association, said things should be "pretty much back to normal" after Thursday.

A new tropical depression, meanwhile, formed in the Atlantic and has the potential to become the eighth tropical storm of the hurricane season on Thursday or Friday, the center said.

World news : Tropical Storm Gustav took in a new track???

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