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Mexico faces food, water scarce after deadly flood
VILLAHERMOSA—Authorities worked early Monday to deliver badly needed
food and water to thousands of residents stranded by devastating floods
that have damaged the homes of up to 500,000 people.
Since swollen rivers first broke their banks on Oct. 28, flood waters
have isolated many Gulf coast communities. Thousands of residents who
rescuers haven’t been able to reach have run out of food, water and are
living with no electricity and no way to flee. “People are fighting over
food and water, and the lack of electricity and running water are making
life in the city impossible,” said Martha Lilia Lopez, who has been
handing out food to victims on behalf of a nonprofit foundation she
heads.
Authorities said two more bodies were found Sunday floating in brackish
waters covering much of the region. If confirmed the deaths were caused
by the flooding, the disaster’s toll would stand at 10. “We are seeing
one of the worst natural catastrophes in the history of the country,”
President Felipe Calderon said in Tabasco state. “Not only because of
the size of the area affected, but because of the number of people
affected.”
Many in Tabasco remained camped out on the rooftops or upper floors of
their flooded homes to guard their possessions from looters, but their
resolve was running out — along with essential supplies. “I would prefer
to be in my house instead of a shelter, but we ran out of everything,”
said Patricio Bernal, 53, who was evacuated by boat along with his wife
from their home in the state capital, Villahermosa. “We spent days
without food. We thought we were going to die,” said Marta Vidal, 47,
who was taken to safety by helicopter.
Daniel Montiel Ortiz, who oversaw helicopter rescue efforts for the
federal police, said rescuers were now focused on “selective
evacuations” — primarily of sick people — and delivering badly needed
supplies to isolated communities still surrounded by water.
Some desperate residents in Villahermosa broke into shuttered stores and
took food and household goods, and police reported detaining about 50
people for looting over the last couple of days. But Ortiz called those
“isolated incidents.”
After water covered about 80 percent of Tabasco’s already swampy coastal
territory, authorities struggled to calculate the damages. The federal
Social Development Department estimated that the homes of 400,000 to
500,000 people were damaged or destroyed.—Agencies
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