Ida's Past
As Ida prepares to make landfall near Pensacola, our friends to the north will be dealing with mostly heavy rains.
Nothing compared to our friends to the south who are dealing with mud and land slides. This is what A.P. is saying.
VERAPAZ, El Salvador (AP) -- Tears streamed down Elsy Portillo's badly bruised face as she walked Monday behind coffins carrying her mother and only child in this town buried by a massive landslide, one of a series that killed at least 134 people nationwide.
Portillo's body was flung repeatedly against the walls as she fought to keep her 7-year-old son from being swept away in the powerful river of mud, boulders and floodwaters overtaking their home in the pre-dawn hours Sunday.
The 40-year-old woman survived but said she lost everything she had lived for.
"My little angel was taken away," she said, sobbing, her right eye swollen shut. "My little angel was taken away."
Days of heavy rains unleashed massive flooding and mudslides across the mountainous Central American country Sunday.
Hurricane Ida's presence in the western Caribbean late last week may have played a role in drawing the rain-packed, Pacific low-pressure system toward El Salvador on the other side of Central America, said Dave Roberts, a Navy hurricane specialist at the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami, Florida. Ida weakened Monday as it lost strength over the water on its way to a landfall on the U.S. Gulf Coast.
No place was harder hit than Verapaz, a poor, farming town of 7,000 people on the slopes of the Chichontepec volcano, about 30 miles (50 kilometers) east of the capital, San Salvador.
Boulders, many weighing more than a ton, littered the cobblestone streets Monday. Cars and homes protruded from the mounds of mud. Bloated dead cows lay on rooftops after being hurled into the air -- attesting to the force of the deluge that turned the normally picturesque coffee-growing town into a disaster zone.
Soldiers and townspeople continued digging through rock and debris to search for the 47 people who remained missing Monday. Collapsed walls and downed power lines prevented heavy machinery from entering. Many used their bare hands.
Hopes of finding survivors dimmed with each passing hour.
President Mauricio Funes flew in to survey the damage. He urged federal lawmakers to approve millions of dollars in loans from the Inter-American Development Bank, saying some of the funds would be redirected for reconstruction.
"The images speak clearly," said Funes, after stopping to talk to men shoveling more than a meter (3 feet) of mud from their homes.
Portillo was among 200 townspeople who spent the night at a church in the nearby town of San Isidro after losing their homes. Eight of the bodies, including those of her son and mother, were sent in coffins to the church as well.
While children slept on the floor, many of the adults passed the night praying and weeping over coffins lined up near the altar. Some would open them to see who was inside. One woman fainted. Small candles were lit and stuck to the coffins.
Portillo said the heavy rain woke her up Sunday. When she saw the deluge coming toward her home, she woke up her son and tried to get them up to the roof.
But when she opened her door, they were swept away by the fast-moving current that filled her home. She lost her grip on her son when her body was slammed against one of the cement walls.
"The current threw me about but I never lost consciousness," she said. "I swallowed so much mud."
Portillo said after everything calmed down, she found the bodies of her mother and son a few blocks away. Mayor Jose Antonio Hernandez said rescuers found six more bodies in Verapaz, raising the town's death toll to 16. Nationwide, the death toll stood at 134, Funes told reporters.
Portillo's son, Francisco Alejandro Portillo, was the youngest victim found so far. Two other girls, ages 13 and 15, and a woman who was eight months pregnant were also killed.
Portillo's sister Sonia Margarita made it to her roof with her four children. They sat huddled together in the rain and felt helpless as friends and neighbors were carried away, screaming in the darkness.
"My children are traumatized," she said. "If we had moved off of that roof, we would have died."
Nothing compared to our friends to the south who are dealing with mud and land slides. This is what A.P. is saying.
VERAPAZ, El Salvador (AP) -- Tears streamed down Elsy Portillo's badly bruised face as she walked Monday behind coffins carrying her mother and only child in this town buried by a massive landslide, one of a series that killed at least 134 people nationwide.
Portillo's body was flung repeatedly against the walls as she fought to keep her 7-year-old son from being swept away in the powerful river of mud, boulders and floodwaters overtaking their home in the pre-dawn hours Sunday.
The 40-year-old woman survived but said she lost everything she had lived for.
"My little angel was taken away," she said, sobbing, her right eye swollen shut. "My little angel was taken away."
Days of heavy rains unleashed massive flooding and mudslides across the mountainous Central American country Sunday.
Hurricane Ida's presence in the western Caribbean late last week may have played a role in drawing the rain-packed, Pacific low-pressure system toward El Salvador on the other side of Central America, said Dave Roberts, a Navy hurricane specialist at the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami, Florida. Ida weakened Monday as it lost strength over the water on its way to a landfall on the U.S. Gulf Coast.
No place was harder hit than Verapaz, a poor, farming town of 7,000 people on the slopes of the Chichontepec volcano, about 30 miles (50 kilometers) east of the capital, San Salvador.
Boulders, many weighing more than a ton, littered the cobblestone streets Monday. Cars and homes protruded from the mounds of mud. Bloated dead cows lay on rooftops after being hurled into the air -- attesting to the force of the deluge that turned the normally picturesque coffee-growing town into a disaster zone.
Soldiers and townspeople continued digging through rock and debris to search for the 47 people who remained missing Monday. Collapsed walls and downed power lines prevented heavy machinery from entering. Many used their bare hands.
Hopes of finding survivors dimmed with each passing hour.
President Mauricio Funes flew in to survey the damage. He urged federal lawmakers to approve millions of dollars in loans from the Inter-American Development Bank, saying some of the funds would be redirected for reconstruction.
"The images speak clearly," said Funes, after stopping to talk to men shoveling more than a meter (3 feet) of mud from their homes.
Portillo was among 200 townspeople who spent the night at a church in the nearby town of San Isidro after losing their homes. Eight of the bodies, including those of her son and mother, were sent in coffins to the church as well.
While children slept on the floor, many of the adults passed the night praying and weeping over coffins lined up near the altar. Some would open them to see who was inside. One woman fainted. Small candles were lit and stuck to the coffins.
Portillo said the heavy rain woke her up Sunday. When she saw the deluge coming toward her home, she woke up her son and tried to get them up to the roof.
But when she opened her door, they were swept away by the fast-moving current that filled her home. She lost her grip on her son when her body was slammed against one of the cement walls.
"The current threw me about but I never lost consciousness," she said. "I swallowed so much mud."
Portillo said after everything calmed down, she found the bodies of her mother and son a few blocks away. Mayor Jose Antonio Hernandez said rescuers found six more bodies in Verapaz, raising the town's death toll to 16. Nationwide, the death toll stood at 134, Funes told reporters.
Portillo's son, Francisco Alejandro Portillo, was the youngest victim found so far. Two other girls, ages 13 and 15, and a woman who was eight months pregnant were also killed.
Portillo's sister Sonia Margarita made it to her roof with her four children. They sat huddled together in the rain and felt helpless as friends and neighbors were carried away, screaming in the darkness.
"My children are traumatized," she said. "If we had moved off of that roof, we would have died."

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