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SHAKE AND BLOW
Central America reels from Tropical Storm Agatha

Hardest hit was Guatemala, with 152 people killed, dozens injured and at least 100 people missing. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Staff Writers
Guatemala City (AFP) June 1, 2010
Central America reeled on Tuesday after the first eastern Pacific tropical storm of the season, Agatha, hammered the region with heavy rains that killed 179 people and washed away thousands of homes.

Hardest hit was Guatemala, with 152 people killed, dozens injured and at least 100 people missing after floods and mudslides swept away ramshackle homes along hills and destroyed bridges and roads, complicating rescue efforts.

President Alvaro Colom released a photograph of a sinkhole in the capital that had swallowed up an entire three-story building.

In countries on the mountainous and mostly poor isthmus linking North and South America, the poorest people often build their homes near rivers so they have access to water.

But in in the rainy season their homes are endangered by swollen rivers and mudslides.

Tropical Storm Agatha, which dumped heavy rain on the isthmus just ahead of Tuesday's first day of the Atlantic hurricane season, destroyed up to 22,000 homes in Guatemala, forcing 155,000 people from their homes, said officials.

About half of those affected were staying in shelters, officials said.

The storm killed 17 people in Honduras and 10 in El Salvador, according to official figures.

With millions of dollars in damages and the impoverished population particularly hard hit, the United States pledged 112,500 dollars and sent a plane carrying relief supplies Tuesday; the European Union pledged 3.6 million dollars in humanitarian aid.

Colom said he would ask Washington to grant Guatemalan migrants in the United States temporary protected status that would allow them to stay and work without fear of deportation because of the conditions in Guatemala.

Salvadoran and Hondurans living in the United States already have that special status.

"It's something we sought a while ago but now the timing is favorable with this natural disaster," said Guatemala's deputy foreign minister Miguel Angel Ibarra.

A US airplane carrying four helicopters and supplies was due in Guatemala City from its base in Honduras to help deliver emergency aid to the Guatemalan Air Force, at Colom's request.

Guatemala City's response was hampered by a separate emergency: the eruption of nearby Pacaya volcano whose ash has closed the capital's Aurora international airport since last week, when two people were also killed and three went missing. That left thousands of travelers stranded.

But Guatemala City's international airport, closed since Thursday, was reopened on Tuesday to commercial and freight flights, said civil aviation spokeswoman Monica Monge.

The World Bank said it was finalizing with Guatemala an 85 million dollar loan to help it cope with the two disasters.



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SHAKE AND BLOW
Deadly storm kills more than 140 in Central America
Guatemala City (AFP) May 31, 2010
A violent weekend storm that lashed Central America killed at least 144 people, left 53 more missing and 45,000 evacuated from their homes, the Red Cross' Panama-based regional headquarters said. "The latest reports are of 118 dead in Guatemala and 17 in Honduras, while in El Salvador the death toll as of yesterday (Sunday) stood at nine, but it may have gone higher," Red Cross Pan American ... read more







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