Hurricane Stan kills 133 in Mexico, Central America (Reuters) Updated: 2005-10-06 09:17
HEARD CRIES
"I was like a worm sliding around in the mud," said Alexander Flores, whose
home on the edge of San Salvador was buried under six feet of dirt and rocks.
"I just heard two shouts from my mother, saying, 'Alex, Alex,' maybe for me
to help her or her trying to save me," he said. His mother and five children,
including a newborn baby, all died, he said.
Sixty-two people have now been killed in El Salvador, 50 in Guatemala, and
another 21 total in Mexico, Nicaragua and Honduras, authorities said.
Coffee production was likely to be hit in Guatemala and Honduras just as the
harvest is beginning, producers said.
Swollen rivers washed away three large concrete bridges and ripped apart
houses and buildings when they burst their banks at the city of Tapachula, in
Mexico's Chiapas state.
"My house was here," said Rosenberg Arias, a doctor pointing into the Coatan
river. "And that was my grandmother's house, and that was my neighbor's house.
Now there is nothing," he said, signaling into the angry waters.
Looters wandered into a damaged hotel and carried away office equipment and
radios. Tree trunks lay beside cars, a refrigerator and dead fish by the
riverside.
Tens of thousands of people fled their homes in Chiapas and the neighboring
state of Veracruz after Stan, now reduced to a tropical depression, swept in
from the Atlantic this week.
It came ashore on Tuesday near the city of Veracruz as a Category One
hurricane with winds of nearly 80 mph (128 kph).
"There is flooding, in some communities mudslides; there is no access by
road, no telephone communication," said Jordan Jimenez of Mexico's civil
protection agency in Chiapas. "There are people missing, some in shelters."
Greenpeace said the flooding in Mexico was made worse by deforestation, as
water rushed down bare hillsides.
"Once again, this underlines the importance of conserving eco-systems,
particularly forests and mangroves, to prevent the impact of hurricanes," the
environmentalist group said.
Mexico's three main oil exporting ports, on the Gulf of Mexico, reopened
after closing as Stan approached.
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