Stabroek News Sunday

Rescuers struggle to reach storm-hit Guatemalan village; dozens missing

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Rescue workers yesterday struggled over treacherou­s roads buried in mud and rubble to reach a remote mountain village in Guatemala swamped by a devastatin­g storm that has killed dozens of people across Central America and southern Mexico.

Storm Eta’s torrential downpours toppled trees, engorged swift-moving rivers, and ripped down parts of a mountainsi­de above the village of Queja in the central Guatemalan region of Alta Verapaz, burying dozens of people in their homes.

The heavy rains are still triggering mudslides in Queja. Francisco Muz, a retired general who was helping in the rescue efforts, said he spoke to Gloria Cac, a woman who was missing 22 family members.

“At ground zero there is a terrible reality. The landslides have not stopped because of the rains in the mountains ... this national tragedy is centered in San Cristobal Verapaz, in Queja village,” Muz told Reuters.

The devastatin­g weather front has spread destructio­n from Panama to Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras and Mexico, which between them have registered well over 50 deaths.

A steady drizzle fell as firefighte­rs in San Cristobal Verapaz prepared to make the journey on foot to Queja, which they said could take a full day.

“An attempt was already made to get through but it’s very difficult and we’re really sad we couldn’t get through, but it’s very dangerous,” said Juan Alberto Leal, an official with the local fire service. “The problem is that there are several mudslides throughout the route.”

Ordinarily, the 22-km (13.7 mile) trip between San Cristobal Verapaz and Queja takes an hour by car.

Some 55 soldiers, 25 firefighte­rs and 15 police officers have managed to reach the site of the disaster and were using shovels and picks to search for survivors and retrieve bodies.

So far three bodies have been recovered.

“The mud is very thick, it’s hard to know really just how thick, and we’re (digging) from the surface until we find the first homes and there could be bodies there,” Army spokesman Colonel Ruben Tellez said.

“It could take months to unearth” all the homes, he added.

President Alejandro Giammattei on Friday hinted up to 150 people could have been buried in the Queja landslide.

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