Looting breaks out in Mexico's Acapulco after devastating Hurricane Otis

Speaking at a regular press conference, Lopez Obrador promised the government would help people in the stricken city in the southern state of Guerrero, one of Mexico's poorest. Raul Busto Ramirez, 76, an engineer who works at Acapulco's airport, said stores across the city have been shuttered since the hurricane hit, and that looting broke out due to shortages.


Reuters | Mexico City | Updated: 27-10-2023 21:44 IST | Created: 27-10-2023 21:36 IST
Looting breaks out in Mexico's Acapulco after devastating Hurricane Otis
Representative image Image Credit: ANI
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Looting broke out in the Mexican city of Acapulco after the popular beach resort was battered on Wednesday by record-breaking Hurricane Otis, which killed 27 people and left residents grappling with shortages of food and water. The lethal Category 5 storm left damage estimated in the billions of dollars.

"There were acts of looting in some places because there was an emergency," President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said on Friday, urging residents not to take advantage of the situation. On Thursday evening, people carried off goods including food, water and toilet paper from stores in Acapulco.

"We came to get food, because we don't have any," a woman told Reuters. Speaking at a regular press conference, Lopez Obrador promised the government would help people in the stricken city in the southern state of Guerrero, one of Mexico's poorest.

Raul Busto Ramirez, 76, an engineer who works at Acapulco's airport, said stores across the city have been shuttered since the hurricane hit, and that looting broke out due to shortages. "The aid is insufficient, and all the stores are closed or destroyed," he said, adding that ATM machines are down, leaving residents unable to withdraw money.

Otis pummeled Acapulco with winds of 165 miles per hour (266 km per hour) early on Wednesday, flooding thoroughfares, tearing roofs from residences and hotels, submerging vehicles, and severing communication, road, and air connections. In addition to the 27 fatalities, four people are still missing, Mexican authorities said on Friday morning.

The government has released scant information about the victims so far, and Lopez Obrador said the country had emerged from the hurricane better than it might have. "We were lucky. Nature, the creator protected us, even with the fury of the hurricane," he said. "There's a lot of material damage but luckily we're not registering too many deaths."

State power utility CFE said on Friday it had restored 50% of the electricity service in Guerrero, despite access and communication obstacles encountered by workers. To evacuate tourists, an air bridge between Acapulco and Mexico City was being set up on Friday after authorities got the control tower at the city's airport back up and running.

Two vessels were en route to Acapulco carrying two water purification plants, a mobile kitchenette, four power plants, and two motor pumps, the government said. Mexican authorities said Otis was the most powerful storm to strike Mexico's Pacific coast, although Hurricane Patricia, which slammed into the resort of Puerto Vallarta eight years earlier, whipped up even higher wind speeds out at sea.

The storm caught forecasters by surprise, gathering strength with unexpected speed and exceeding their initial predictions.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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