Hurricane Hone brushes past Hawaii

This satellite image provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) shows Hurricane Gilma and Tropical Storm Hone, located west-southwest of the southern tip of the Baja California peninsula of Mexico, Thursday, Aug. 22, 2024. (AP)
Short Url
Updated 26 August 2024
Follow

Hurricane Hone brushes past Hawaii

LOS ANGELES:  Hone, a Category 1 hurricane, brushed past Hawaii’s largest island on Sunday, bringing heavy rain and dangerous swells, the US National Hurricane Center said.

The Pacific storm, with maximum sustained winds of 80 miles (130 kilometers) per hour, was “gradually moving away from the Big Island,” the agency said at 11:00 am local time (2100 GMT).

“Tropical storm conditions will continue on the Big Island into the early afternoon, with gradually diminishing wind and rainfall through the evening,” the agency said.

The storm was expected to bring between three and eight inches (7.6 to 20.3 centimeters) of rain over the major island of Hawaii and its surrounding smaller islands.

Local TV station KHON2 said beaches had been closed and emergency shelters opened, while poweroutage.us reported more than 23,000 customers of the Hawaiian Electric Company were without power.

The NHC warned that the storm was “producing life-threatening surf and rip current conditions” on coastlines.

Behind Hone, whose name is Hawaiian for “sweet and soft,” was Hurricane Gilma, a more powerful Category 3 storm on the five-level Saffir-Simpson scale.

Gilma was still some 1,365 miles from Hawaii, and expected to weaken, the hurricane center said.
 


Bangladesh’s Yunus announces resignation, end of interim govt

Bangladesh’s interim leader Muhammad Yunus stepped down on February 16, 2026 in a farewell broadcast to the nation.
Updated 7 sec ago
Follow

Bangladesh’s Yunus announces resignation, end of interim govt

  • Yunus handed over power after congratulating the Bangladesh Nationalist Party and its leader Tarique Rahman

DHAKA: Bangladesh’s interim leader Muhammad Yunus stepped down on Monday in a farewell broadcast to the nation before handing over to an elected government.
“Today, the interim government is stepping down,” the 85-year-old Nobel Peace Prize winner said.
“But let the practice of democracy, freedom of speech, and fundamental rights that has begun not be halted.”
Yunus returned from self-imposed exile in August 2024, days after the iron-fisted government of Sheikh Hasina was overthrown by a student-led uprising and she fled by helicopter to India.
“That was the day of great liberation,” he said. “What a day of joy it was! Bangladeshis across the world shed tears of happiness. The youth of our country freed it from the grip of a demon.”
He has led Bangladesh as its “chief adviser” since, and now hands over power after congratulating the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) and its leader Tarique Rahman on a “landslide victory” in elections last week.
“The people, voters, political parties, and stakeholder institutions linked to the election have set a commendable example,” Yunus said.
“This election has set a benchmark for future elections.”
Rahman, 60, chief of the BNP and scion of one of the country’s most powerful political dynasties, will lead the South Asian nation of 170 million.
Rebuilt institutions’
Bangladeshi voters endorsed sweeping democratic reforms in a national referendum, a key pillar of Yunus’s post-uprising transition agenda, on the same day as the elections.
The lengthy document, known as the “July Charter” after the month when the uprising that toppled Hasina began, proposes term limits for prime ministers, the creation of an upper house of parliament, stronger presidential powers and greater judicial independence.
“We did not start from zero — we started from a deficit,” he said.
“Sweeping away the ruins, we rebuilt institutions and set the course for reforms.”
The referendum noted that approval would make the charter “binding on the parties that win” the election, obliging them to endorse it.
However, several parties raised questions before the vote, and the reforms will still require ratification by the new parliament.
The BNP alliance won 212 seats, compared with 77 for the Jamaat-e-Islami-led alliance, according to the Election Commission.
Jamaat chief Shafiqur Rahman conceded on Saturday, saying his Islamist party would “serve as a vigilant, principled, and peaceful opposition.”
Newly elected lawmakers are expected to be sworn in on Tuesday, after which Tarique Rahman is set to become Bangladesh’s next prime minister.
Police records show that political clashes during the campaign period killed five people and injured more than 600.
However, despite weeks of turbulence ahead of the polls, voting day passed without major unrest and the country has responded to the results with relative calm.