Imperial Valley Press

LocalDirec­tory

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molten rock, Hernandez said her brother and sister ran to check on their 70-year-old grandmothe­r on the family’s plot of land in the village of San Miguel Los Lotes.

“She said that it was God’s will, she was not going to flee,” Hernandez said. “She was unable to walk. It was hard for her to get around.”

Her brother and sister made it to safety, but their grandmothe­r has not been seen again.

Hernandez and her husband, Francisco Ortiz, survived because they moved out of Los Lotes just two months ago to begin a new life on a small plot of land.

The couple has been staying at a Mormon church in the nearby city of Escuintla and going to a morgue there to await news.

So far only the body of one relative, her 28-yearold cousin, Cesar Gudiel Escalante, has been recovered and identified.

“The people ended up buried in nearly 3 meters of lava,” Ortiz said. “Nobody is left there.”

Other families experience­d similar tragedies.

As President Jimmy Morales toured the area and met with survivors on Monday, a woman begged him to help her loved ones in Los Lotes.

“Mr. President, my family is missing.

Send a helicopter to throw water over them because they are burning,” she said.

“I have three children, a grandchild, and all my brothers, my mother, all my family are there . ... More than 20 have disappeare­d.”

The fast-moving flows with temperatur­es as high as 1,300 degrees Fahrenheit and hot ash and volcanic gases that can cause rapid asphyxiati­on caught many off guard.

On Tuesday, it was clear that the official death toll of at least 70 was sure to climb and fears spread that anyone still stuck in

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