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| Rescue workers help a woman out of her
endangered house in El Salvador Oct. 5,
2005. | MEXICO CITY, Oct. 5 (Xinhuanet) --
Tropical Storm Stan reached hurricane strength and killed at least 125 people in
Central America and Mexico, and relentless rains on Wednesday fueled fears of
further devastation.
According to official reports, Guatemala and El
Salvador were hit the hardest and have the largest numbers of victims.
The Guatemalan National Coordination for the
Reduction of Disasters Wednesday said that at least 50 people died and 106 were
injured by torrential rains in the past few days in the country.
It added that 36 houses were destroyed and 3,323
others damaged.
According to local press reports, hundreds of people
spent the night on the roof of their houses on Tuesday because the water level
exceeded two meters.
Guatemalan President Oscar Berger declared a state of
"public disaster" on Wednesday due to the serious damage caused by Stan, which
reached Category One on the 5-category Saffir-Simpson scale.
Berger, who will visit the devastated areas in the
coming hours,told a press conference that he made the declaration to prevent the
situation from worsening and to help the victims.
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| Villagers in western part of Guatemala
clean up road damaged by Stan. | Under the state
of "public disaster," road traffic will be restricted in the affected areas,
sanitary perimeters established,and demonstrations and public gatherings banned.
The state of "public disaster" will also allow the
government to set the maximum prices for basic goods so as to prevent monopoly
in the market, guarantee the protection of borders and the evacuation of
victims, the president said.
The Guatemalan radio said the number of victims could
reach 70 because several areas in the western part of the country were buried by
mudslides.
It was reported that 18 bridges collapsed,
plantations were flooded and electricity pylons fell.
In El Salvador, at least 50 people died, including
several children, when landslides buried their houses.
Salvadoran Interior Minister Rene Figueroa said
32,000 other people have been displaced in the country and are staying in 309
shelters all over the country.
According to the National Emergency Committee, the
rains could continue into Thursday nationwide, although with less intensity than
last weekend.
The Salvadoran Legislative Assembly declared a state
of emergency and public disaster on Wednesday, enabling the government to
request international aid and make use of resources from all the state
institutions to cope with the emergency.
In Nicaragua, nine people, including six foreign
nationals, died due to Stan, but press reports indicate that the number of dead
could be 11.
The six foreigners were illegal aliens traveling on
board a boat near the Fonseca Gulf.
Meanwhile, in Honduras, the authorities confirmed the
death of four people -- one adult and three children -- and the missing of a
member of the military.
Heavy rains have hit the whole country except the
south.
In Costa Rica, two people were reportedly killed by
the tropical rains. A red alert remains in force in seven districts ofthe
country's northwestern province of Guanacaste.
In southern Mexico, where Hurricane Stan touched down
on Tuesday, authorities reported the death of at least 10 people while 120,000
others were affected.
This year's Atlantic hurricane season, which runs
from June 1 to Nov. 30, has been one of the deadliest and most active on record.
Hurricane Katrina, which slashed the US Gulf Coast on
Aug. 29, was one of the worst natural disasters in the country's history,
killing at least 1,212 people, displacing millions of others and costing the
country up to 200 billion US dollars. Enditem |