Hurricane Dean slammed into Mexico's Caribbean coast yesterday,
flooding streets, blowing the roofs off houses and battering
resorts where tens of thousands of tourists and residents huddled
in shelters.
A tree is blown down in
Chetumal by Hurricane Dean, August 21, 2007.
Water surged down a main street at thigh level in Chetumal, a
city of about 150,000 people near where Dean made landfall. Broken
trees and street lights lay strewn around.
After killing 11 people on its rampage through the Caribbean,
Dean was a Category 5 hurricane - the strongest possible - when it
tore into Mexico, landing around the cruise ship port of Costa
Maya, near the border with Belize.
But there were no immediate reports of casualties.
The storm lost some of its power over land and was downgraded to
a Category 3, although forecasters warned that roaring winds and
rains were still a threat.
Tourist resorts like Playa del Carmen and Cancun, devastated by
Hurricane Wilma in 2005, appeared to have escaped major damage.
Litter and leaves were scattered on the streets in Playa del
Carmen, where tired tourists emerged at first light after an
uncomfortable night in a hotel converted to a shelter for 400
people.
"I didn't sleep, I had backache," said Italian tourist
Massimiani Luca, 31. "There were nine of us in this room, eight in
that room," he said.
The government of Quintana Roo state, which took the hit from
Dean head on, said it was unaware of any deaths.
Tens of thousands of tourists fled Cancun over the weekend
before Dean crashed into the area, famous for white beaches,
crystal clear waters and Mayan ruins like Chichen Itza.
Chetumal was left without power when the hurricane's sustained
winds of 265 kph and gusts of up to 320 kph knocked over dozens of
power poles and trees. The aluminum roofs of some houses were blown
off.
Dean is likely to continue weakening over land but should still
be a hurricane when it heads out into the oil-producing Campeche
Sound on Tuesday night local time, the US National Hurricane Center
said.
Mexico's state oil company has closed and evacuated 407 oil and
gas wells, meaning lost production of 2.65 million barrels of crude
per day.
Heavy rain drenched Belize, a former British colony that is home
to some 250,000 people and a famous barrier reef. In Belize City,
Chyla Gill was evacuated with her family from her wooden house and
sent to a concrete school shelter.
"We packed for a week because after the hurricane there is
always flooding and we can't go back to our houses," she said. "We
live near a swamp and the crocodiles come out."
(China Daily August 22, 2007)