One million people affected by Mexico floods
Rescuers worked yesterday on saving hundreds of thousands of people trapped by the worst floods ever recorded in Mexico's southern state of Tabasco, with more than one million residents affected.
The oil-rich state the size of Belgium is now 80 percent underwater, officials said, adding that they expect more rain in the coming days.
"New Orleans was small compared to this," said state Governor Andres Granier, comparing the disaster to the flooding caused by Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
Rivers continued to swell due to the non-stop rain, and more than 850 towns have been flooded in the Gulf of Mexico state, officials said.
"Of the 2.1 million Tabasquenos, more than half are suffering from this serious problem that has not been experienced in the history of Tabasco," Granier told reporters late Thursday.
But where Katrina killed more than 1,000 people in New Orleans alone, the flooding in Tabasco has only claimed one life so far.
"Around 300,000 people are still trapped in their homes in different locations," Granier said, adding that army and navy helicopters and rescue boats were working on the rescue effort.
Tabasco "is devastated," he said of the 29,000 square kilometer (11,000 square mile) state. "100 percent of crops are lost."
Granier warned that the flooding could get even worse as forecasters say a new cold front could bring more rain over the weekend.
President Felipe Calderon urged Mexicans to donate aid to flood victims in an address to the nation late Thursday.
"The situation is extraordinarily grave," he said, describing the flooding as "one of the worst natural disasters in the history of the country."
Many Tabasquenos "have lost their homes, their belongings, their crops, and the means to maintain their children," he said. "Others remain in their homes but with no access to food, water or medicine."
Calderon earlier ordered the secretaries of national defense, navy, social development and environment as well as his chief of cabinet to travel to Tabasco to personally direct rescue and aid efforts.
Some 400 doctors and health workers were deployed to more than 300 towns in the region to detect any outbreak of infections, according to Tabasco's civil protection agency.
The floods began last week when a cold front brought heavy rain that caused the Grijalva, Carrizal and Puxcatan rivers to burst their banks.
Soldiers and state authorities had placed more than 700,000 sand bags along the rivers to prevent flooding, but the water rose above the barriers.
The floods worsened over the past three days as authorities drained water from two dams in the neighboring state of Chiapas to prevent them from exceeding their capacity.
The water rose again Thursday in the state capital of Villahermosa, which was flooded Wednesday after the Grijalva River burst its banks.
But hundreds of Villahermosa residents refused to leave their flooded homes amid reports of looting in the city of 750,000 people.
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