Manila Bulletin

Hurricane flattens Mexico homes, but no major disaster

-

CHAMELA, Mexico (AFP) – Patricia flattened a fishing hamlet on Mexico's Pacific coast, but authoritie­s were relieved to see Saturday that the record-breaking hurricane largely spared the country and dissipated as it moved north.

The wood and brick homes with tin and palm leaf roofs of 40 families in the village of Chamela were blown away when Patricia made landfall as a Category Five monster in Jalisco state late Friday.

The families survived because they evacuated to a shelter before landfall, which occurred just 20 kilometers (12 miles) to the south.

The villagers returned to pick up the pieces on Saturday and complained that the government has not provided any help.

''We have nothing. My property's gone,'' said Griselda Hernandez, looking at the space without walls or roof that used to be her home.

While the residents of Chamela lost nearly everything, most of the region incredibly suffered relatively little damage and the authoritie­s rejoiced that no deaths were reported.

President Enrique Pena Nieto lifted the hurricane alert for Jalisco, Colima and Nayarit states as he visited the region, saying that the damage was ''smaller than expected.”

Seafront hotels were cleared of their guests in Puerto Vallarta before Patricia's arrival, while thousands of tourists were evacuated by bus or plane, many taken to shelters. But the town had little damage in the end.

Transport Minister Gerardo Ruiz Esparza said Mexico was saved because the population was well prepared and the hurricane was slowed by the Sierra Madre Occidental mountain range.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines