68 believed buried in Mexico mudslide: death toll rises, as country pummeled by back-to-back storms
Rescue efforts continue in La Pintada in hard-hit Guerrero state after a mudslide swept away homes. In Acapulco, anger flares amid evacuation.
LA Times,
19
September, 2013
MEXICO
CITY — Rescue teams were searching Thursday for an estimated 68
people believed buried in a mudslide after multiple storms battered
large swaths of Mexico, killing nearly 100 people nationwide and
leaving thousands stranded or homeless.
While
much attention was focused on tourists caught in the Pacific resort
of Acapulco, grimmer reports emerged from villages in that hard-hit
region of Guerrero state, which were largely cut off from aid and may
have suffered large-scale devastation.
Luis
Felipe Puente, the federal Civil Protection coordinator, said in a
television interview that the national death toll climbed Thursday to
97 people in nine states. He said authorities were searching the
Guerrero town of La Pintada, where at least 58 people were reported
missing after a rain-propelled mudslide. Rescue operations have
evacuated more than 300 people. Later, authorities said the missing
numbered at least 68.
"We
hope all [the missing] are not" dead, Puente said.
"We
haven't seen bodies," Interior Minister Miguel Angel Osorio
Chong said after flying over the region. "But there were
two-story houses that are now completely covered. There was a tall
church, and now you don't see a church. It disappeared."
Some
residents, Osorio Chong said, were resisting evacuation. "They
say, I won't go until I find my daughter, my sister."
If
confirmed, the La Pintada landslide will be the single deadliest
incident after twin storms assailed opposite coasts of Mexico last
weekend, a rare double whammy that officials said they had not seen
here in more than half a century. President Enrique Peña Nieto flew
to the region Thursday afternoon.
"We
have had extraordinary rains," Peña Nieto said.
In
photographs of La Pintada that he and his associates displayed at a
news conference, it looked as though someone had taken a giant
paintbrush and swiped the verdant green countryside with a wide,
harsh red stripe. That was apparently the mudslide that carried away
residents, their homes and belongings.
Manuel,
a tropical storm that hit Guerrero and other parts of the western
coast several days ago — as Hurricane Ingrid was pummeling the
eastern coast — weakened, then grew to hurricane strength, then
weakened again Thursday, meteorological officials said. At its
strongest, it aimed Thursday for Sinaloa state, where authorities
reported extensive flooding.
In
Acapulco, meanwhile, an airlift of thousands of stranded tourists,
most of them Mexicans, continued. Forty-five flights ferried peopled
from Acapulco to Mexico City on Thursday after landslides and a
flooded airport isolated the popular resort town on a holiday
weekend.
Angry
that they were not getting sufficient attention, some tourists staged
a roadblock protest in Acapulco, stopping military trucks that some
believed were helping privileged Mexicans cut the long lines for
flights.
"We
are getting desperate; we have no more money," tourist Alfredo
Gonzalez told reporters. "We are signed up for a military
flight, but they told us there are thousands and thousands of people
ahead of us."
Peña
Nieto's government was coming under criticism for having failed to
give sufficient warning to residents as the storms bore down on the
country. Critics said the president, with less than 10 months in
office, was more worried about his first performance in annual
Independence Day ceremonies and neglected weather realities.
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