Mexico
braces for third deadly storm
Hurricane
Manuel makes landfall on back of two torrential storms that have left
at least 80 dead across country
19
Sepetember, 2013
Mexico,
which is reeling from two storms which left more than 80 people dead,
was braced for more devastation on Thursday night after a third made
landfall.
Hurricane
Manuel reached the northwestern state of Sinaloa on Thursday, adding
to a growing countrywide crisis that has seen the death toll rising
every day along with new reports of acute emergencies requiring
attention.
So
far the worst affected area has been the southern state of Guerrero
which was hit by an earlier version of Manuel when it first made
landfall on Monday as a tropical storm before dissipating, returning
to sea and regaining strength.
The
full extent of the disaster, however, is only now beginning to emerge
as news of death, destruction and dwindling supplies of food in
mountain communities takes over from the more visible chaos the storm
caused in big cities such as Acapulco.
Fifty-eight
people were still missing after part of a hillside collapsed on top
of much of the coffee-growing village of La Pintada, leaving
survivors trapped between a swollen river they cannot cross and the
still unstable mountain that is threatening to fall apart again at
any moment.
"We
have not seen a single body yet and at the moment we are focused on
rescuing the villagers still there," interior minister Miguel
Angel Osorio Chong told MVS Radio. He said that the authorities had
already airlifted 300 people to safety but were struggling to get to
the remaining 45 because of adverse weather conditions.
The
minister revealed that the day's priorities also included reaching at
least three other isolated communities in Guerrero to check out
reports of similar, if smaller, landslides.
"There
are many places that we cannot get to by land or by air," he
said. The new push to reach marooned towns and villages comes after
claims the government ignored poor indigenous communities to focus on
big urban centres such as Acapulco.
Even
there, however, the authorities are struggling to cope with the
crisis that flooded much of the city, including the airport, and left
40,000 holidaymakers trapped and increasingly desperate.
The
authorities say that about 12,000 tourists have been airlifted out so
far with the help of alternative landing strips. They hope to
re-establish the road link between the resort and Mexico City that
was blocked by multiple landslides by Friday.
Meanwhile,
21 other Mexican states, out of a total of 32, are also facing
serious damage as a result of both Manuel's first incarnation and
Hurricane Ingrid that also hit the mainland on Monday, rolling in
from the other side. Osorio Chong said 49,000 people have been
evacuated across the country, with 33,000 of them currently housed in
shelters.
With
no end in sight to the crisis, meteorologists were also monitoring an
entirely new weather system they predicted would become a named
tropical storm in the Gulf of Mexico in the next few hours and could
potentially follow a similar path to Ingrid after that. "The
panorama does not look good," Osorio Chong said.
Hurricane
Manuel barrels northward
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