The Prague Post - Hurricane Otis cuts off Mexico's battered Acapulco

EUR -
AED 4.220558
AFN 79.296787
ALL 96.308191
AMD 439.639749
ANG 2.057108
AOA 1053.84741
ARS 1675.295532
AUD 1.770053
AWG 2.068621
AZN 1.950976
BAM 1.956428
BBD 2.314943
BDT 140.104955
BGN 1.955772
BHD 0.433305
BIF 3390.239558
BMD 1.149234
BND 1.50104
BOB 7.94127
BRL 6.202985
BSD 1.149369
BTN 101.893694
BWP 15.515979
BYN 3.917126
BYR 22524.981469
BZD 2.31127
CAD 1.621534
CDF 2578.880791
CHF 0.929391
CLF 0.027739
CLP 1088.198322
CNY 8.193749
CNH 8.194898
COP 4438.329244
CRC 576.685038
CUC 1.149234
CUP 30.454694
CVE 110.757419
CZK 24.400818
DJF 204.241865
DKK 7.465164
DOP 73.723031
DZD 150.102574
EGP 54.393
ERN 17.238506
ETB 175.401838
FJD 2.624507
FKP 0.87404
GBP 0.882204
GEL 3.126009
GGP 0.87404
GHS 12.56686
GIP 0.87404
GMD 84.468033
GNF 9987.990738
GTQ 8.808826
GYD 240.428442
HKD 8.934454
HNL 30.282411
HRK 7.534403
HTG 150.484061
HUF 388.371476
IDR 19222.198599
ILS 3.765346
IMP 0.87404
INR 101.969558
IQD 1505.49621
IRR 48382.740493
ISK 146.389538
JEP 0.87404
JMD 184.489196
JOD 0.814758
JPY 176.382163
KES 148.484451
KGS 100.500426
KHR 4625.66615
KMF 489.573638
KPW 1034.312072
KRW 1661.872904
KWD 0.353148
KYD 0.957807
KZT 602.183219
LAK 24869.418573
LBP 102913.881526
LKR 350.232377
LRD 210.82671
LSL 19.892489
LTL 3.393388
LVL 0.69516
LYD 6.269086
MAD 10.698864
MDL 19.620295
MGA 5154.313386
MKD 61.569132
MMK 2412.917917
MNT 4127.522644
MOP 9.202153
MRU 45.738133
MUR 52.899363
MVR 17.703937
MWK 1996.218804
MXN 21.4798
MYR 4.815865
MZN 73.49381
NAD 19.893198
NGN 1658.045866
NIO 42.23463
NOK 11.724716
NPR 163.030311
NZD 2.032403
OMR 0.441887
PAB 1.149284
PEN 3.880995
PGK 4.84054
PHP 67.608249
PKR 322.823537
PLN 4.259595
PYG 8145.613639
QAR 4.184245
RON 5.085817
RSD 117.210316
RUB 93.086274
RWF 1665.814318
SAR 4.309924
SBD 9.458874
SCR 16.214265
SDG 690.112089
SEK 11.003045
SGD 1.502014
SHP 0.862223
SLE 26.658033
SLL 24098.856546
SOS 656.765316
SRD 44.244922
STD 23786.818298
STN 24.708526
SVC 10.057227
SYP 12706.978479
SZL 19.892924
THB 37.407799
TJS 10.607096
TMT 4.03381
TND 3.371276
TOP 2.691625
TRY 48.364445
TTD 7.793501
TWD 35.559017
TZS 2821.36899
UAH 48.36892
UGX 4005.285154
USD 1.149234
UYU 45.764684
UZS 13779.312423
VES 257.063131
VND 30250.705342
VUV 140.303847
WST 3.220964
XAF 656.061896
XAG 0.024046
XAU 0.00029
XCD 3.105862
XCG 2.071465
XDR 0.81452
XOF 653.512127
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.149254
ZAR 20.119348
ZMK 10344.485926
ZMW 25.656102
ZWL 370.052798
  • RYCEF

    -0.3900

    14.95

    -2.61%

  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    23.59

    -0.34%

  • AZN

    0.3100

    82.03

    +0.38%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    76

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0300

    15.87

    +0.19%

  • RELX

    0.1300

    44.3

    +0.29%

  • RIO

    -2.4800

    67.89

    -3.65%

  • GSK

    0.4700

    46.82

    +1%

  • NGG

    0.4000

    75.14

    +0.53%

  • BTI

    0.5400

    52.98

    +1.02%

  • CMSD

    -0.0800

    23.82

    -0.34%

  • VOD

    -0.1800

    11.2

    -1.61%

  • BCC

    2.0700

    70.41

    +2.94%

  • JRI

    -0.1800

    13.7

    -1.31%

  • BP

    0.2500

    35.12

    +0.71%

  • BCE

    -0.3800

    22.29

    -1.7%

Hurricane Otis cuts off Mexico's battered Acapulco

Hurricane Otis cuts off Mexico's battered Acapulco

Mexican authorities rushed to send emergency aid and assess damage in the Pacific beach resort of Acapulco on Wednesday after a powerful hurricane severed communications and road links.

Text size:

President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said that there were no initial reports of deaths after Otis came ashore during the night as a "potentially catastrophic" Category 5 hurricane.

"There's material damage and blocked roads. The highway to Acapulco has landslides," he said at his morning news conference.

Officials emphasized that the lack of communications made it difficult to know the extent of the damage.

The government was working to restore communication in the affected area, Lopez Obrador said.

A convoy carrying humanitarian aid set off to try to reach Acapulco by land due to the impossibility of flying into the city, authorities said.

"The urgent thing is to attend to the affected population. We still don't have the damage assessment because there's no communication," Civil Protection national coordinator Laura Velazquez said.

Even the navy and military were "seriously affected," she added.

Otis was downgraded to a Category 1 storm with maximum sustained winds of around 80 miles (130 kilometers) per hour, down from 165 miles per hour when it hit the coast, the US National Hurricane Center (NHC) said.

The storm had rapidly strengthened to the most powerful category of the five-step Saffir-Simpson scale as it neared land, taking authorities by surprise.

"Rarely, according to records, does a hurricane develop so quickly and with such force," Lopez Obrador said.

On Tuesday night, the Mexican president had appealed on social media for people to move to emergency shelters and away from rivers, streams and ravines.

- Tourists take shelter -

At dawn, much of Acapulco, a city of about 780,000 inhabitants in Guerrero state, was still without power.

State electricity company CFE later said that it had managed to restore supply to 40 percent of the more than half a million affected customers, most of them located in Acapulco.

Videos posted on social media showed damaged buildings, shattered windows and tourists using beds and mattresses as protective barriers in their hotel rooms.

Others took refuge in bathrooms.

Before the storm hit, many people bought last-minute supplies of food and water, with some business and homeowners boarding up their windows.

More than 500 emergency shelters were opened for residents.

Heavy rains deluged Guerrero and parts of neighboring Oaxaca -- two of Mexico's poorest states, home to remote mountain communities.

"This rainfall will produce flash and urban flooding, along with mudslides in areas of higher terrain," the NHC warned.

Hurricanes hit Mexico every year on both its Pacific and Atlantic coasts, usually between May and November, though few make landfall as a Category 5.

In October 1997, Hurricane Pauline hit Mexico's Pacific coast as a Category 4 storm, leaving more than 200 people dead, some of them in Acapulco.

It was one of the deadliest hurricanes to batter Mexico.

In October 2015, Patricia became the most powerful hurricane ever recorded, pummeling Mexico's Pacific coast with sustained winds of 200 miles per hour.

But the storm caused only material damage and no deaths as it made landfall in a sparsely populated mountainous area.

Just this week, Tropical Storm Norma left three people dead, including a child, after making landfall for a second time in the northwestern state of Sinaloa.

Earlier this month, two people died when Hurricane Lidia, an "extremely dangerous" Category 4 storm, struck the western states of Jalisco and Nayarit.

Scientists have warned that storms are becoming more powerful as the world gets warmer with climate change.

L.Hajek--TPP