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Warnings, watches issued as tropical storm Earl forms in Caribbean Sea

Tropical Storm Earl, seen here as a tropical wave on Aug. 1, 2016, off the coast of the island of Hispaniola, is the fifth named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season. NASA/NOAA

MIAMI – A weather system that already has caused at least six deaths in the Dominican Republic has been designated as Tropical Storm Earl.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said Tuesday that Earl was threatening to bring heavy rains, flooding and high winds to Mexico, Belize and Honduras. All three of those countries issued tropical storm warnings for some areas, and a hurricane watch was issued for part of the Mexican coast.

READ MORE: NOAA predicts near-normal 2016 Atlantic hurricane season

On Sunday, Earl was still a weaker tropical wave but knocked down power lines and started a fire that killed six passengers on a bus filled with people returning from a beach excursion.

On Tuesday, the storm was centred about 860 km east of Belize City in the Caribbean. It had top sustained winds of 75 km/h and was speeding west at 35 km/h.

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