[lit-ideas] not just in new orleans

  • From: Eternitytime1@xxxxxxx
  • To: lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sun, 23 Oct 2005 21:33:31 EDT

 
Hi, 
Hm...so why are they looting?  Same  reasons as in New Orleans?  
Curious and trolling for thoughts, 
Marlena in Missouri 
Looting Breaks Out in Mexico After Wilma  
By WILL WEISSERT 
Associated Press Writer 
CANCUN, Mexico (AP) -- Mexicans and stranded tourists, hungry and frustrated  
after a two-day beating by Hurricane Wilma, stood in line to buy supplies 
Sunday  or simply raided grocery or furniture stores, dragging goods from shops 
ripped  open by the storm. 
The hurricane's steady march toward southern Florida meant an end here to two 
 days of howling winds and torrential rains that shattered windows, peeled 
away  roofing and sent the ocean crashing into hotel lobbies. The sun emerged 
over  Mexico's sugar-white Caribbean beaches. 
But another kind of chaos took over, as police shot into the air to scare  
looters away from a shopping center, and looters responded by throwing rocks 
and 
 chucks of concrete. 
Downtown, officials feared looters would turn on tourists, so they quickly  
evacuated more than 30 foreigners from a downtown area overrun by people 
raiding  stores. Military officials and police stood guard outside businesses 
and 
set up  checkpoints to seize stolen goods. 
"It's chaos," said fire official Gregorio Vergara. "They are taking things  
all over the city." 
One group of residents pushed carts against the boarded-up windows of a  
grocery store in an attempt to break in. At a convenience store, Cancun 
resident  
Alex Aguilar took batteries and aspirin. 
"The window was broken, so we just went in and got what we wanted," he  said. 
Others waited in long lines at the few stores that were open. Some American  
tourists without local currency offered $100 bills for $5 calling cards. 
Meanwhile, military aid convoys rolled into the resort town, handing out  
bottled water and medical aid. City officials distributed food packages of 
rice,  
beans, crackers and cooking oil to people standing in lines that stretched 
for  blocks. 
Larry Lowman, of Beaufort, S.C., carried away armloads of emergency supplies  
for the shelter where he was staying. 
"It's an expedition to bring food for everybody," he said. 
There was little food left on the isolated island of Cozumel, as well, making 
 some people anxious. 
"Right now, there is nothing to buy on the island," resident Daniela Ayala  
told The Associated Press by telephone. "People are in the streets looking for  
food, and they are starting to get desperate." 
The storm knocked out many of the island's docks, making it difficult for  
navy ships to arrive. State officials were trying to clear airstrips on Cozumel 
 
and nearby Isla Mujeres so that planes could land with aid. President Vicente 
 Fox said the government would send helicopters, as well. 
State officials said at least three people died during the storm: one by a  
falling tree and two others when a gas tank exploded. Four badly decomposed  
bodies were also found floating in flood waters on Cozumel, but officials said  
it was unclear if the deaths were related to the storm. 
Last week, Wilma killed 13 people in Jamaica and Haiti. 
The hurricane, which had weakened to a Category 2 after making landfall,  
returned to open waters Sunday and continued its steady march toward southern  
Florida. It drenched western Cuba with heavy rains and flooded communities 
along 
 the coast. Officials had evacuated more than 625,000 people from their homes 
in  recent days. 
Rainfall of up to 15 inches was possible in some parts of the country, but  
Wilma was not expected to make landfall, the U.S. National Hurricane Center  
said. 
At 8 p.m., Wilma's winds were just 1 mph shy of Category 3 status. It was  
centered about 170 miles west-southwest of Key West and moving northeast at  
about 15 mph, the Hurricane Center said. 
As the storm crossed the Gulf of Mexico, forecasters said they saw no  
evidence of wind shear that they hoped would reduce the hurricane's intensity  
before it makes landfall in southwest Florida. 
For those in Mexico who endured two days of Wilma's howling winds and  
torrential rains, the cleanup began on Sunday. Soldiers used bulldozers to 
clear  
tree branches from roads. Residents waded through submerged streets to check  
damage to homes or try to start flooded cars. Tourists tried to make  
arrangements to return home. 
Dennis Catesby, of Coventry, England, hiked from a downtown shelter back to  
his hotel room with some friends to raid the minibar of beer and supplies. 
They  decided against staying at the hotel, though, and hiked back to the 
shelter,  stopping only to snap a photo in front of a smashed, roadside 
Jacuzzi. 
"After three days in a shelter, it was minibar time for us," said Catesby,  
who was married in Cancun on Monday. "The beer is going to be free today." 
Fox toured damaged areas on Sunday and said he would ask lawmakers to budget  
$1.1 billion in disaster relief funds for 2006, in part to help Mexico 
recover  from Wilma. He said his main priority was rebuilding roads and other  
infrastructure to revive the country's $11 billion tourism industry, which took 
 a 
devastating blow. 
It was unclear when the Cancun airport would be operating again, and many  
hotels could take weeks - if not months - to repair. 
As Mexico's military sent amphibious vehicles and federal police began  
arriving to keep the peace, the U.S. Embassy dispatched consular officials to  
shelters to help tourists prepare to leave. The U.S. government also offered  
$200,000 in aid. 
In Florida, meanwhile, residents streamed out of the Keys and coastal  
communities under mandatory evacuation orders after officials posted a 
hurricane  
warning for the southern part of the state. The Bahamas also issued a hurricane 
 
warning for the northwestern part of the country. 
Also Sunday, the Dominican Republic and Haiti received heavy rains when  
Tropical Storm Alpha made landfall, then later weakened into a tropical  
depression. Days of rain from Wilma had already swollen rivers and saturated 
the  soil 
in the countries, prompting concerns about flash floods and mudslides. 
Officials used the Greek alphabet to name Alpha - the record-setting 22nd  
named storm of the Atlantic season - after running all the way through the 2005 
 
storm name list. The hurricane season ends next month. 
--- 
On the Net: 
National Hurricane Center: _http://www.nhc.noaa.gov_ 
(http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/)  

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