|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Hurricane inflicts massive death toll in Guatemala
By Bill Van Auken
10 October 2005
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
The death toll from Hurricane Stan is expected to reach over
1,500 in Guatemala, as mudslides have buried entire villages following
several days of torrential rains. The storm ravaged areas across
northern Central America, with more than 100 other deaths reported
from Mexico to Costa Rica.
As of Saturday, Guatemalan government officials had confirmed
530 dead and 337 missing, with close to 100,000 made homeless
by the natural disaster.
Worst hit was the area around Santiago Atitlán, where
several coffee-growing communities disappeared under a massive
wall of mud, described as half a mile wide and up to 20 feet deep.
These included the small Indigenous town of Panabaj and the neighboring
community of Tzanchaj.
Guatemalan volunteer firefighters spokesman Mario Cruz
gave an estimate of 1,400 people dead. There are no survivors
here, it has already been 48 hours that they are dead, he
said Saturday. Firefighters and local residents had worked round
the clock trying to dig through the mud with shovels, axes and
machetes in hope of rescuing survivors.
Panabaj will no longer exist, said the towns
mayor Diego Esquina. We are asking that it be declared a
cemetery. We are tired. We no longer know where to dig.
The mayor of Santiago Atitlán, about six miles from
Panabaj, said that he estimated the death toll in the area at
between 500 and 1,000 people.
Local villagers who escaped the disaster with their lives said
that after several days of rain, the sides of two volcanoes gave
way on Wednesday, sending down a wall of mud and debris that crushed
homes, businesses and schools with many of the local residents
trapped inside them.
Thousands of people are still waiting for food and water,
stunned by the mud and water that has risen to their knees, while
others are unable to stand on the ground as the water has reached
the roofs of their homes where they wait desperately to be rescued,
according to a report from the Guatemalan news service Cirigua.
The report described terrified survivors of the mudslides in San
Marcos who still hear the shouts of people who were trapped
between the mud and the rubble of a church in which they had sought
refuge.
Meanwhile, the Guatemalan press has indicated that the devastation
has unleashed a wave of price gouging, with businesses doubling
the price of fuel, bottled water and other basic necessities in
the affected areas.
The catastrophe is the worst to strike the impoverished region
since Hurricane Mitch in 1998. That storm claimed some 10,000
lives throughout Central America, with 268 deaths in Guatemala.
In addition to the far greater death toll this time, the economic
impact on Guatemala is also far more severe. According to a government
estimate, 30 percent of the countrys crops were wiped out
by the storms, causing over $400 million in losses. Large sections
of processing industries have also been forced to shut down, resulting
in widespread layoffs of workers.
Guatemalan President Oscar Berger declared a state of public
disaster and appealed for international aid. In a public statement,
he warned, I imagine that we are going to have unpleasant
surprises. There are many disappeared, many mudslides, and communities
that are incommunicado.
The countrys conservative government, representing the
old landed oligarchy and the military, has come under fierce criticism
over its handling of the disaster.
Bergers statement Tuesday, after posing for the cameras
with impoverished storm evacuees, did not help matters: For
the moment the emergency does not amount to much; the inhabitants
of these areas are already used to this.
The statement was indicative of the indifference of the countrys
ruling elite to the suffering of the poor and signaled the complacency
and slowness with which the government reacted to the disaster.
One of the wealthiest landowners in the country, Berger was
accused of visiting only those areas where his own properties
were affected, while ignoring the areas in the highlands, home
to the countrys majority of Indigenous peasants, that were
hardest hit.
The storms devastation will only deepen the crisis of
a country that suffers among the most intense levels of poverty
in Latin America.
The disaster also exposed the intense divisions that remain
from Guatemalas 36-year-old civil war in which successive
US-backed dictatorships killed over 200,000 people. In Panabaj,
villagers refused to allow in military units sent to join rescue
and recovery operations. The town was the scene of a 1990 massacre
in which unarmed protesters were gunned down by troops.
See Also:
Amid propaganda campaign
over Iraq: Guatemalas mass graves ignored by mass media
[2 July 2003]
Anger mounts
over relief delays: Central American death toll from Hurricane
Mitch could reach 18,000
[5 November 1998]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |