GUATEMALA CITY – Collapsed roads and highway bridges are complicating rescue efforts in Guatemala after Tropical Storm Agatha drenched Central America, burying homes under mud and killing at least 178 people.
Dozens of people were still missing yesterday and rescue teams struggled to reach remote rural communities after the storm cut off roads and destroyed up to 18 major road bridges and dozens of smaller footbridges.
Some 35,000 people remained in emergency shelters three days after Agatha, the first named storm of the 2010 Pacific hurricane season, hit western Guatemala, dumping more than a metre of rain in places and raising concern over the coffee crop there and in El Salvador.
Guatemalan aid workers relied on six helicopters sent by the United States, as well as private helicopters, to get tents and medical supplies to remote towns on the Pacific coast, but villagers in inland areas were frustrated at the lack of help.
At least 152 people were killed in Guatemala, either crushed in their homes or swept away by swollen rivers, and 100 others were missing, according to the government. Twelve people were killed in El Salvador and 14 in Honduras.
By yesterday, the rain had stopped and Guatemala reopened its international airport. However giant sinkholes in the capital created death traps on streets, having swallowed entire buildings as they opened up and blocking off major roads. – (Reuters)