The Denver Post

Rescuers search for people in mudslide caused by Eta

- Et Nic Wirtu and Kirk Semple

ANTIGUA, GUATEMALA » Rescue teams on Saturday dug through mud and debris in a remote village in central Guatemala searching for more than 100 people whose homes were swallowed by a massive mudslide caused by rainfall from remnants of Hurricane Eta.

Francisco Muss, a retired Guatemalan army general who has been coordinati­ng rescue efforts since Thursday, when part of a mountain slope sheared off and smothered some two dozen homes in the village of Quejá, said rescuers had found three bodies so far and believed that at least 125 people had been killed.

The tally adds to a confirmed storm- related death toll of more than 60 throughout Central America, according to regional officials, local media and wire services.

Hundreds of other homes in Quejá were also damaged or destroyed, Muss said in a phone interview. “The mountainsi­de collapsed,” he said. “It split into two separate mudslides once it got to the village of Quejá.”

About 3,000 survivors managed to flee Quejá on foot during the storm, he said, seeking shelter in the neighborin­g village of Santa Elena.

“They need many things to survive over the next eight days because they have nothing,” Muss said. “They have lost everything.”

Eta roared ashore as a Category 4 hurricane Tuesday along the northeast Caribbean coast of Nicaragua and, for the next several days, churned slowly through northern Nicaragua, then Honduras, blasting high winds and dumping torrential rainfall across Central America that caused widespread flooding and landslides.

Though the weather system was downgraded to a tropical storm, then a tropical depression, it continued to bring devastatio­n to the region. After moving back over the Caribbean on Friday, it had regained enough strength by Saturday morning to be classified again as a tropical storm.

By midday Saturday it was about 30 miles north- northwest of Grand Cayman Island and heading toward Cuba, the National Hurricane Center in Miami said. Tropical storm warnings were in effect for the Cayman Islands, parts of Cuba, the northweste­rn Bahamas, the Florida Keys and the Florida coast from Golden Beach to Chokoloske­e, the Hurricane Center said.

Guatemala’s national disaster agency said 12 deaths had been confirmed from Eta, but officials expect that count to climb sharply amid rescue operations in Quejá and elsewhere, which have been slowed by blocked roads and washed- out bridges.

At least 23 people have died in Honduras from storm- related flooding and landslides, while eight died in Panama and two in Costa Rica, Reuters reported. At least two people died in Nicaragua, local media reported.

In southern Mexico, local officials said that 20 people had died in mudslides and floods, according to The Associated Press.

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