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Mexico airlifts tourists stranded by hurricane
by Staff Writers
Cabo San Lucas, Mexico (AFP) Sept 17, 2014


Odile threatens US-Mexico border with flood, mudslides
Mexico City (AFP) Sept 17, 2014 - The remnants of Hurricane Odile threatened to spark floods and mudslides on the US-Mexico border Wednesday after devastating beach resorts and leaving thousands of tourists stranded in the Baja California peninsula.

The storm thrashed the Mexican coast as a powerful category three hurricane on the five-level Saffir-Simpson scale late Sunday and Monday, flooding hotels, flattening homes and sparking acts of looting, though no deaths were reported.

After churning over the narrow Gulf of California as a tropical storm on Wednesday, Odile dissipated over the state of Sonora, with winds of 45 kilometers (30 miles) per hour, according to the US National Hurricane Center.

But the center warned that Sonora and the US southwestern border states of New Mexico and Arizona would likely be hit by life-threatening flash floods and mudslides.

The city of Phoenix, Arizona, opened an emergency operations center and offered sandbags to residents to protect homes from flooding. People in New Mexico also sandbagged their properties.

As Odile made its way north, Mexican authorities continued to airlift tourists who were marooned in Los Cabos.

Around 5,000 tourists have been flown out of Baja's Los Cabos and La Paz airports since Tuesday, a tourism ministry spokesman told AFP.

The spokesman said it would take another 48 hours to move all the 25,000 tourists who were still stranded after their hotels were wrecked by the hurricane.

Classes were suspended in Sonora and some 60 people were evacuated from a fishing village.

More trouble beckoned for Mexico as Tropical Storm Polo moved parallel to the southwestern coast and was nearly a hurricane, with winds of 110 kilometers (70 miles) per hour, the US forecasters said.

Swirling some 265 kilometers (165 miles) southwest of the Zihuatanejo resort town, the storm's outer rain bands were soaking the coast, which was devastated by a deadly hurricane last year.

Mexican military and commercial airplanes began Tuesday to airlift tourists stranded in the Los Cabos resorts after Hurricane Odile left luxury hotels and communities in tatters.

Some 30,000 tourists have been waiting for a ride out of the devastated zone in Baja California peninsula after Odile rolled across the region Sunday and Monday before being downgraded to a tropical storm.

Without open service stations to fuel cars or public transport, hundreds of people walked to the heavily damaged Los Cabos airport, pulling their luggage behind them for a chance to catch a flight.

"I've been standing in line for almost an hour under this infernal heat, but it's worth it to get out of here," said Sheilla Roach, a US university student who was supposed to go home Sunday, the night the hurricane struck.

The airport, along with the region's other international terminal in La Paz, were left inoperable after the storm. The Los Cabos terminal lost power and a ceiling collapsed while windows were broken.

The federal police said one of its planes took 137 people to Mazatlan. Mexican airline Interjet sent a plane for 150 passengers. The armed forces deployed jets to take people to Tijuana and Mexico City.

US, British and Canadian consular officials went to the area to support their citizens.

Odile struck late Sunday, forcing some 26,000 foreigners and 4,000 Mexican beachgoers to take shelter in area hotels.

But even well-fortified resorts were not spared the fury of the hurricane, which smashed hotel windows, flooded rooms and sent palm trees flying into swimming pools.

Officials said nobody died in the storm but some 135 people suffered relatively light injuries such as cuts.

Outside the airport, a convenience store was distributing food and water to passersby.

While tourists were escaping the region, residents were left surveying the damage left by Odile.

Scores of wood-plank and tin-roof homes were flattened in one neighborhood. Trees and power lines collapsed on homes and cars while the storm cut off power and running water.

Odile also sparked an outbreak of looting that left electronic stores ransacked and supermarkets bereft of necessities like water, food and toilet paper.

- New threat -

While Odile was now a tropical storm, the US National Hurricane Center said it was still producing heavy rains over portions of Baja California, northwestern Mexico and the southwestern United States.

The storm was packing winds of 85 kilometers (50 miles) per hour and the downpour was likely to cause life-threatening flash floods and mudslides, the Miami-based center said.

And while Odile was heading north, a new tropical storm, dubbed Polo, formed off Mexico's southwestern coast and was expected to become a hurricane late Wednesday, the US forecaster said.

Late Tuesday, Polo was 375 kilometers (235 miles) southwest of Acapulco, the legendary resort in Guerrero state, which was devastated by a deadly hurricane around this time last year.

Packing winds of 85 kilometers per hour, Polo was expected to remain offshore as it creeps northward parallel to the Pacific coast.

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