Current:Home > reviewsAcapulco residents are left in flooded and windblown chaos with hurricane’s toll still unknown -Achieve Wealth Network
Acapulco residents are left in flooded and windblown chaos with hurricane’s toll still unknown
View
Date:2025-04-17 15:06:22
ACAPULCO, Mexico (AP) — A day after Hurricane Otis roared ashore in Acapulco, unleashing massive floods and setting off looting, the resort city of nearly 1 million descended into chaos, leaving residents without electricity or internet service as the toll remained uncertain.
The early images and accounts were of extensive devastation, toppled trees and power lines lying in brown floodwaters that in some areas extended for miles. The resulting destruction delayed a comprehensive response by the government, which was still assessing the damage along Mexico’s Pacific coast, and made residents desperate.
Many of the once sleek beachfront hotels in Acapulco looked like toothless, shattered hulks a day after the Category 5 storm blew out hundreds — and possibly thousands — of windows.
There seemed to be a widespread frustration with authorities. While some 10,000 military troops were deployed to the area, they lacked the tools to clean tons of mud and fallen trees from the streets. Hundreds of trucks from the government electricity company arrived in Acapulco early Wednesday, but seemed at a loss as to how to restore power, with downed electricity lines lying in feet of mud and water.
Jakob Sauczuk was staying with a group of friends at a beachfront hotel when Otis hit. “We laid down on the floor, and some between beds,” Sauczuk said. “We prayed a lot.”
One of his friends showed reporters photos of the windowless, shattered rooms in the hotel. It looked as if someone had put clothes, beds and furniture in a blender, leaving a shredded mass.
Sauczuk complained that his group was given no warning, nor were offered safer shelter, by the hotel.
Pablo Navarro, an auto parts worker who was lodged in temporary accommodations at a beach front hotel, thought he might die in his 13th story hotel room.
“I took shelter in the bathroom, and thankfully the door held,” said Navarro. “But there were some room where the wind blew out the windows and the doors.”
Navarro stood Wednesday outside a discount grocery and household goods store near the hotel zone, as hundreds of people wrestled everything from packs of hot dogs and toilet paper to flat screen TVs out of the muddy store, struggling to push loaded metal shopping carts onto the mud-choked streets outside.
“This is out of control,” he said.
Isabel de la Cruz, a resident of Acapulco, tried to move a shopping cart loaded with diapers, instant noodles and toilet paper through the mud.
She viewed what she took as a chance to help her family after she lost the tin roof of her home and her family’s important documents in the hurricane.
“When is the government ever going to look after the common people?” she said.
Inside one store, National Guard officers allowed looters to take perishable items like food, but made futile efforts to prevent people from taking appliances, even as people outside loaded refrigerators on top of taxis.
It took nearly all day Wednesday for authorities to partially reopen the main highway connecting Acapulco to the state capital Chilpancingo and Mexico City. The vital ground link allowed dozens of emergency vehicles, personnel and trucks carrying supplies to reach the battered port.
Acapulco’s commercial and military airports were still too badly damaged to resume flights.
Acapulco’s Diamond Zone, an oceanfront area replete with hotels, restaurants and other tourist attractions, looked to be mostly underwater in drone footage that Foro TV posted online Wednesday afternoon, with boulevards and bridges completely hidden by an enormous lake of brown water.
Large buildings had their walls and roofs partially or completely ripped off. Dislodged solar panels, cars and debris littered the lobby of one severely damaged hotel. People wandered up to their waists in water in some areas, while on other less-flooded streets soldiers shoveled rubble and fallen palm fronds from the pavement.
Wednesday night the city plunged into darkness. There was no phone service, but some people were able to use satellite phones loaned by the Red Cross to let family members know they were OK.
Alicia Galindo, a 28-year-old stylist in the central Mexican city of San Luis Potosi, was one of the lucky ones to get such a call. Her parents and brother were staying in Acapulco’s Hotel Princess for an international mining conference when Otis hit early Wednesday with 165 mph (270 kmh) winds.
They told her the worst part of the storm was between 1 a.m. and 3 a.m. when “windows began to fall, floors broke up, mattresses flew, hallways collapsed, doors fell down ... until everything was gone,” she said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. Fortunately, they escaped unhurt, she said.
However, Galindo had yet to hear from her boyfriend, who was attending the same conference but staying in a different hotel.
On Tuesday, Otis took many by surprise when it rapidly strengthened from a tropical storm to a powerful Category 5 as it tore along the coast.
“It’s one thing to have a Category 5 hurricane make landfall somewhere when you’re expecting it or expecting a strong hurricane, but to have it happen when you’re not expecting anything to happen is truly a nightmare,” said Brian McNoldy, a hurricane researcher at the University of Miami.
Acapulco, Tecpan and other towns along the Costa Grande in Guerrero were hit hard, Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said Wednesday morning. He said conditions were so bad that communication with the area had been “completely lost.”
Later Wednesday, Milenio TV circulated photos of López Obrador trying to make it to Acapulco by ground, in some places getting out to walk. It was not immediately clear if he made it.
Acapulco is a city at the foot of steep mountains. Luxury homes and slums alike cover the city’s hillsides with views of the glistening Pacific Ocean. Once drawing Hollywood stars for its nightlife, sport fishing and cliff diving shows, the port has in recent years fallen victim to competing organized crime groups that have sunk the city into violence, driving many international tourists to the Caribbean waters of Cancun and the Riviera Maya or beaches farther down the Pacific coast in the state of Oaxaca.
López Obrador noted that Otis was a stronger hurricane than Pauline, which hit Acapulco in 1997, destroying swaths of the city and killing more than 300 people.
___
Follow AP’s climate coverage at: https://apnews.com/hub/climate-and-environment
___
Verza reported from Mexico City. Associated Press writer Seth Borenstein in Washington, D.C., contributed to this report.
veryGood! (41)
Related
- South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
- Deputies shoot and kill man in southwest Georgia after they say he fired at them
- Teen Mom Stars Amber Portwood and Gary Shirley’s Daughter Leah Looks All Grown Up in Rare Photo
- Fired Philadelphia officer leaves jail to await trial after charges reduced in traffic stop death
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- 'This is fabulous': Woman creates GoFundMe for 90-year-old man whose wife has dementia
- Who Is Olympian Raven Saunders: All About the Masked Shot Put Star
- USA Olympic Diver Alison Gibson Reacts to Being Labeled Embarrassing Failure After Dive Earns 0.0 Score
- Alex Murdaugh’s murder appeal cites biased clerk and prejudicial evidence
- Noah Lyles tested positive for COVID-19 before winning bronze in men's 200
Ranking
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- Rain, wind from Tropical Storm Debby wipes out day 1 of Wyndham Championship
- Taylor Swift cancels Vienna Eras tour concerts after two arrested in alleged terror plot
- Americans tested by 10K swim in the Seine. 'Hardest thing I've ever done'
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Pocket-sized creatures: Video shows teeny-tiny endangered crocodiles hatch
- The Ultimate Guide to Microcurrent Therapy for Skin: Benefits and How It Works (We Asked an Expert)
- Flood damage outpaces some repairs in hard-hit Vermont town
Recommendation
Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
Team USA's Grant Holloway wins Olympic gold medal in 110 hurdles: 'I'm a fireman'
Morocco topples Egypt 6-0 to win Olympic men’s soccer bronze medal
How an anti-abortion doctor joined Texas’ maternal mortality committee
Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
Oregon city at heart of Supreme Court homelessness ruling votes to ban camping except in some areas
Police shooting of Baltimore teen prompts outrage among residents
The 10 college football transfers that will have the biggest impact