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Reporting from Managua, Nicaragua — An unusually late-season Hurricane Otto swirled over the Caribbean just off Central America on Wednesday and headed toward landfall in Nicaragua after
regaining strength. Heavy rains from the storm were blamed for three deaths in Panama, and officials in Costa Rica ordered the evacuation of 4,000 people from its Caribbean coast. Nicaragua
ordered evacuations in low-lying areas of its sparsely populated Caribbean coast, an order that could cover about 7,000 people. The country’s disaster prevention agency said classes would be
canceled in the area south of the town of Bluefields which was hit hard by Hurricane Joan in 1988. The U.S. National Hurricane Center said the westward-moving storm had regained hurricane
strength late Wednesday, with winds of 85 mph, after fluctuating between tropical storm and hurricane status earlier this week. It was expected to make landfall as a hurricane Thursday. The
storm caused heavy rains in Panama as it moved roughly parallel to that nation’s northern coast. Jose Donderis, Panama’s civil defense director, said a landslide just west of Panama City
early Tuesday trapped nine people. Seven were rescued but two were pulled from the mud dead. In the capital, a child was killed when a tree fell on a car outside a school. Panamanian
authorities canceled school and began to release water from the locks and lakes feeding the Panama Canal. Costa Rica’s National Emergency Commission said it was evacuating 4,000 people from
the area where the storm was expected to hit and where rivers could overflow. The effort was expected to involve evacuations by plane, boat and road in the low-lying coastal areas. Costa
Rican President Luis Guillermo Solis said Otto could damage the country’s important coffee and agriculture sectors. Nicaragua also feared damage for impoverished farmers there; Otto could
threaten coffee crops that are almost ready for harvest. Otto “could seriously jeopardize food security for small-holder farmers who rely on maize, beans, cocoa, honey, coffee and livestock
for their livelihoods,” said Jennifer Zapata, a regional director for Heifer International, a U.S.-based anti-poverty group. On Wednesday night, the hurricane was moving west at 9 mph, the
U.S. hurricane center said. Otto was centered about 120 miles east-southeast of Bluefields. NEWSLETTER: GET THE DAY’S TOP HEADLINES FROM TIMES EDITOR DAVAN MAHARAJ » MORE WORLD NEWS SOUTH
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landfall and evacuations. _This article was originally published at 7:55 a.m._ MORE TO READ