Hurricane Irene, now a category 3 storm will probably touch the United States this weekend. But before it gets here Irene is leaving her mark on The Bahamas. At the 8pm update the eye of the storm had reported 120 mph and higher gusts moving at 12 mph. Get the full update on the hurricane after the jump.

@ShottaDru

Hurricane Irene, pumped up to a Category 3 storm, pounded the Bahamas Wednesday and gathered strength as it headed toward the U.S. East Coast, forecasters said.

The National Hurricane Center in Miami said Irene was “hitting the southeastern Bahamas hard.” In its 8 p.m. EDT update, the center said the storm, with sustained top winds of 120 mph and higher gusts, was moving between Rum Cay and Long Island, Bahamas, and heading northwest at 12 mph.

The storm was expected to continue in that general motion Wednesday night and then turn toward the north-northwest before turning north Thursday and Thursday night. On its forecast track, Irene will cross the central Bahamas Wednesday night and northwest Bahamas Thursday.

The storm should gain strength during the next day or two and could become a Category 4 hurricane by Thursday, forecasters said.

A hurricane warning was posted for the southeastern, central and northwestern Bahamas. A tropical storm warning for the Turks and Caicos Islands has been discontinued.

United Nations officials in New York said Irene’s heavy rains were causing flooding and agricultural damage in Haiti, a Caribbean island nation always vulnerable to storms because it lacks a tree canopy. U.N. officials said more than 160 evacuation sites had been opened and aid supplies have been mobilized in anticipation that Haitians will be displaced. However, no major losses or damage had been reported.

Haiti is still recovering from a 2010 earthquake and last November’s Hurricane Tomas.

Forecasters said Irene was expected to shift gradually toward the northwest through Wednesday night and then veer northward Thursday.

Irene could produce 6-12 inches of rain in the Bahamas and the Turks and Caicos Islands, the center said. The storm also could produce 1-3 inches of additional rain across Puerto Rico and Hispaniola, with isolated storm amounts of 15 inches possible, the center said. The rains could produce life-threatening flash floods and mudslides in areas of steep terrain.

Hurricane- or tropical storm-force winds and storm surges also were forecast in the warning area.

In the Bahamas, the storm surge could hit 11 feet, posing a more deadly threat than hurricane-force winds and drenching rain, The Miami Herald reported.

“It’s always a big concern,” said Geoffrey Greene, senior meteorologist with the Bahamas Department of Meteorology. “We are a flat island nation. We know we’re going to get some flooding.”

Whether Irene would make landfall in the United States was uncertain, forecasters said. The hurricane center reported “high confidence” in a scenario in which Irene’s core would be about 200 miles off the Florida coast for the next few days, the Herald said. After that, the track was uncertain, with computer models indicating an eastward path that stretched from South Carolina to New England.

UPI