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Australia's Northern Territory prepares for Tropical Cyclone Fina

Darwin, Australia, shut down its airport on Saturday as a precaution due to a tropical storm that is forecast to cause destructive winds and floods in the north of the country.

The Bureau of Meteorology in Australia said that Fina, a category 3 cyclone located in the Van Diemen Gulf, with wind gusts of up to 185 km/h (115mph), would pass north of Darwin, capital of the Northern Territory later on Saturday, as a "severe Tropical Cyclone".

On its website, the weather bureau warned that the cyclone would hit remote Tiwi islands and Cape Hotham before it reached Darwin. Residents of Darwin were urged to start or continue their preparations immediately, including securing boats, property and other valuables.

Darwin International Airport issued an alert on Fina, its Facebook page, saying that all flights today, 22 Nov, are cancelled. The airport added that the conditions were expected worsen.

The warning issued for Darwin, a city with a population of about 140,000 people, brings back painful memories of the Cyclone Tracy that wiped out 66 lives on Christmas Day, 1974. It was one of Australia’s worst natural disasters.

Dean Narramore, senior meteorologist at the Weather Bureau, said that although it was unlikely to landfall in Darwin on Saturday morning, it would be felt there.

Narramore, a meteorologist with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, said that the forecast was for "widespread and heavy rains" as well as "damaging to locally destructive wind." "Staying above water means the intensity is likely to remain," he continued.

According to the Weather Bureau, Category 3 tropical cyclones are two levels below the most dangerous rating. They typically cause damage to structures, trees, and crops, and power outages.

The ex-tropical storm Alfred, which hit Queensland in March, closed schools and left hundreds of thousands without power. (Reporting and editing by Diane Craft, Himani Sarkar and Sam McKeith from Sydney)

(source: Reuters)