Bangkok Post

Twin storms spark Mexico chaos

- MICHAEL WEISSENSTE­IN

ACAPULCO, MEXICO: Mexican soldiers dug through tonnes of mud and dirt in search of victims of a massive landslide, as authoritie­s looked for a federal police helicopter that went missing while carrying out relief operations on the floodstric­ken Pacific coast.

The helicopter with three crew members on board was returning from the remote mountain village of La Pintada, where the mudslide occurred, when it went missing on Thursday. There is still no sign of it, said Interior Secretary Miguel Angel Osorio Chong.

‘‘They risked their lives all the time,’’ Osorio Chong said. ‘‘ We are truly worried.’’

Using picks and shovels, soldiers and farmers removed dirt and rock from atop the cement or corrugated-metal roofs of houses looking for bodies in the town north of Acapulco, where 68 people were reported missing following Monday’s slide. Others carried away pieces of trees, wood and other debris.

Two bodies have been recovered, but it was unclear if they were among those on the list of missing.

In a press conference late on Friday night, President Enrique Pena Nieto and several of his top ministers announced that the confirmed death toll from the flooding and landslides brought by the twin weekend storms of Manuel and Ingrid had risen to 101 from 97. The figure does not include the 68 missing.

Authoritie­s said they have evacuated 58,000 tourists from Acapulco in Guerrero state and they will continue to fly people out of the resort until today when they expect its airport to be functionin­g again.

‘‘Guerrero has been the state with the biggest damage and that’s why I will remain here, I will be here this weekend,’’ said Mr Pena Nieto.

Guerrero governor Angel Aguirre said authoritie­s still haven’t been able to reach two mountain communitie­s because of bad weather.

Federal police have been helping move emergency supplies and aid victims of Tropical Storm Manuel, which washed out bridges and collapsed highways throughout the area, cutting Acapulco off by land. At least 500,000 residents of the resort city didn’t have running water, authoritie­s said.

The country’s Transporta­tion Department said that a patchwork connection of roads leading to Mexico City had been partially reopened around midday Friday. Part of the main toll highway, however, remain blocked by collapsed tunnels and mudslides, so drivers were being shunted to a smaller non-toll highway that is in better shape on some stretches.

Yet so badly damaged was that route that traffic was allowed through only in small groups escorted by federal police, and in only one direction: outward bound from Acapulco.

Thousands of cars, trucks and buses lined up at the edge of Acapulco, waiting to get out of the flood- and shortagest­ricken city.

La Pintada was the scene of the single greatest tragedy in destructio­n wreaked by the twin storms, which simultaneo­usly pounded both of Mexico’s coasts, spawning huge floods and landslides across hundreds of kilometres of coastal and inland areas.

Manuel later gained hurricane force and rolled into the northern state of Sinaloa on Thursday morning before weakening over land.

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