As world watches Irma, hurricanes Jose and Katia gather strength

NOAA's GOES satellite shows Hurricane Irma (L) and Hurricane Jose (R) on September 7, 2017 in the Atlantic Ocean. Florida is bracing for the major storm surge set to make landfall this weekend. (NOAA GOES Project via Getty Images)

(FoxNews.com) - As Category 4 Hurricane Irma commands most of the media attention this week, two other hurricanes – Jose and Katia – have been gathering strength as they threaten landfall.

Irma has been slamming Caribbean islands and was projected to reach Florida over the weekend. But Hurricane Jose has officially been classified a Category 4 storm, and Hurricane Katia was set to slam into Mexico early Saturday.

Jose is reportedly following a path similar to Irma's and could potentially hit the same Caribbean islands that were devastated by Irma days ago, the National Hurricane Center said. Antigua and Barbuda were alerted of possible “life-threatening flooding" due to Jose.

The center previously said Jose had sustained wind speeds of 60 mph, but recently became “a little bit stronger” – with winds reaching 150 mph as of Friday morning.

Jose was roughly 415 miles east-southeast of the northern Leeward Islands – which Irma already hit earlier this week.

Meantime, Hurricane Katia was threatening to make landfall early Saturday in the state of Veracruz in Mexico.

Katia, classified as strong Category 2 hurricane and edging toward Category 3 status, has sustained winds of 100 mph, according to a Friday morning advisory. Hurricane warnings suggest rainfall from Katia could result in “life-threatening flash floods and mudslides, especially in areas of mountainous terrain," the National Hurricane Center said.

Katia is currently about 160 miles from Tampico, Mexico.

Mexico was hit late Thursday by a powerful 8.1-magnitude earthquake, leaving at least 32 people dead and triggering tsunami waves.

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