Sabtu, 18 September 2010

Hurricane Karl Kills 2, Remnants Drench Mexico

Hurricane Karl Kills 2, Remnants Drench Mexico

Hurricane Karl kills 2 in landslide, remnants drench mountains of central Mexico


Police officers remove a transit signal fallen due to Hurricane Karl at a highway near the city of... Expand
(AP)

Authorities sent helicopters to rescue scores of people stranded by flooding and hunted for others feared washed away as the remnants of Hurricane Karl pushed inland from Mexico's Gulf Coast. At least two people were reported dead.

Out in the Atlantic, meanwhile, Hurricane Igor strengthened into a Category 2 storm and became better organized on a track that menaced Bermuda late Sunday.

Karl, which caused widespread property damage as a hurricane in the port city of Veracruz, weakened to a tropical depression Friday night. It was dissipating over the mountains early Saturday, but still was expected to produce up to another 3 inches of rain in some areas, the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said.

A landslide buried a house in the town of Nexticapan, killing a 61-year-old woman and a 2-year-old girl and injuring two other people, said Aru Becerra, a spokeswoman for Civil Protection in Puebla, a state bordering the Mexican capital.

Karl had sustained winds of 115 mph (185 kph) when it hit land at midday Friday about 10 miles (15 kilometers) northwest of the port city of Veracruz, but the storm rapidly lost force over rugged territory that includes Mexico's highest volcano, 18,619-foot (5,675-meter) Pico de Orizaba. The storm's winds were down to 25 mph (35 kph) by Saturday morning.


Veracruz state Gov. Fidel Herrera said some 16,000 people were forced to evacuate their homes as the storm roared through, downing trees, power lines and billboards and erasing beachfront huts.
Mexico's Navy sent helicopters to rescue about 40 families trapped on a hill surrounded by floodwaters in the town of San Pancho, north of Veracruz city, said state Civil Protection Secretary Silvia Dominguez. South of the city, in Cotaxtla, houses were flooded up to their roofs and officials were hunting for seven members of two families feared washed away by a swollen river.

"We went through several hours of anxiety but also of organization, coordination," Herrera said. "Fortunately, we are all still here. The death toll (in the state) was zero. This was my biggest challenge yet as governor."

http://abcnews.go.com/Business/wireStory?id=11668177

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