ap

Skip to content
Jose Manuel Calleja looks over what is left of the Vicente Gurrero school Wednesday in Playa Baghad Fishing Camp No. 1 on the northeast coast of Mexico. Hurricane Emily, which made landfall south of the fishing camp, damaged the entire camp, wrecking many of the simple homes of the fishermen. There were no reports of deaths or injuries from the storm.
Jose Manuel Calleja looks over what is left of the Vicente Gurrero school Wednesday in Playa Baghad Fishing Camp No. 1 on the northeast coast of Mexico. Hurricane Emily, which made landfall south of the fishing camp, damaged the entire camp, wrecking many of the simple homes of the fishermen. There were no reports of deaths or injuries from the storm.
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
Getting your player ready...

San Fernando, Mexico – Hurricane Emily blasted northeast Mexico with powerful winds and rains Wednesday, demolishing homes, triggering floods and forcing evacuations on both sides of the Mexican-U.S. border.

The week-old hurricane packing winds of 125 mph came ashore before dawn near San Fernando, about 75 miles south of the border, and spread destruction even as it steadily weakened to tropical-storm strength by late in the day.

There were no immediate reports of deaths or injuries, but thousands of residents and tourists were ordered to evacuate homes and hotels along the Gulf of Mexico. In southern Texas, about 4,000 people fled to 14 shelters.

The storm was closing in on Monterrey, the country’s third-largest city, and officials there set up shelters to prepare for flash flooding.

Wednesday night, Emily had winds of 70 mph and was expected to slow soon to a tropical depression, forecasters said.

Near San Fernando, one of the hardest-hit areas, was the fishing village of Carbonera, where many of those who had been evacuated returned to find their homes destroyed. Lakes caused by floodwaters were everywhere.

“The hurricane finished us,” said Javier Hernandez Galvin, a 45-year-old fisherman who, because of a shortage of clothing, was barefoot, wearing only pink shorts and an old blue T-shirt.

Galvin said his home survived the storm, but a shed where he stored his fishing equipment and boat had been reduced to scraps of wood.

Eugenio Hernandez, governor of Tamaulipas state, which includes San Fernando, said officials were still assessing damage. He said some people fled their homes Wednesday night because of a rain-swollen river.

Emily’s landfall Wednesday marked the second time in three days that the storm hit Mexico. Last weekend, Emily drenched the south coast of Jamaica, killing four people and washing away at least three homes.


Hurricane Emily

Origin: Developed on July 10, became a hurricane on July 13.

Path: Hit Grenada first, then brushed Jamaica before slamming into Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula. It headed into the Gulf of Mexico before striking Mexico’s northeast coast.

Maximum winds: 155 mph over the northwest Caribbean Sea 24 hours before it hit Yucatan. Strongest storm this early in the Atlantic season since record- keeping began in 1860.

Deaths: Five – one in Grenada, four in Jamaica.

Evacuations: Grenada, Jamaica, Yucatan Peninsula, northeast Mexico, southern Texas.

Sources: U.S. National Hurricane Center, local governments.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

RevContent Feed

More in News