In minutes, Mexico’s rains swept away homes and people

In minutes, Mexico’s rains swept away homes and people
People work on a damaged house due to the rains in the municipality of Huauchinango, Puebla State, Mexico, Oct. 11, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 12 October 2025
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In minutes, Mexico’s rains swept away homes and people

In minutes, Mexico’s rains swept away homes and people
  • The disaster zone is the Sierra Madre Oriental, a mountain range that runs parallel to Mexico’s east coast
  • Huauchinango, with 100,000 residents, is one of the largest communities in the disaster zone

HUAUCHINANGO: Standing near the lifeless body of her sister, Rosalia Ortega is grateful to have found her in the river of mud that suddenly swept away her house as torrential rains pounded this Mexican mountain town.
At least 44 people have died since Thursday as floods wreaked a trail of destruction in the hardest-hit states of Hidalgo, Puebla, Queretaro and Veracruz.
“We’re sad, but at least we’re going to give her a Christian burial,” Ortega, 76, told AFP in the town of Huauchinango, in Puebla, a state east of Mexico City that according to official reports saw nine deaths and substantial damage.
The disaster zone is the Sierra Madre Oriental, a mountain range that runs parallel to Mexico’s east coast and is dotted with villages.
On Thursday, well after dark, a rain-swollen mountain river overflowed its banks in Huauchinango and within minutes robbed local residents of their homes and, in some cases, their loved ones.
That’s what happened to Maria Salas, a 49-year-old cook who is sheltering from the rain with an umbrella, watching two soldiers guarding the entrance to her neighborhood.
Salas lost five relatives when their house collapsed, and her own home was destroyed by a landslide.
“I can’t get my belongings, I can’t sleep there,” she said. “I have nothing.”
The grieving families are struggling to pay for funerals and, if anything is left over, to recuperate something from lost or damaged homes.
Huauchinango, with 100,000 residents, is one of the largest communities in the disaster zone and one of a very few that could be accessed Saturday.

Rivers of mud

The floodwaters swept away everything in their path, forming heavy rivers of mud that also rendered uncollapsed homes unusable.
“It was knee-deep,” says Petra Rodriguez, a 40-year-old domestic worker whose house was surrounded by water on both sides.
She and her husband and two sons managed to escape, holding hands so that if the water took one of them, “it would take us all,” she said.
In another part of town, teacher Karina Galicia, 49, showed AFP her mud-damaged, musty house. She and her family were able to run out; had they not, “we would have been buried,” she said.
In less damaged houses, neighbors are trying to remove water with plastic bottles, brooms and shovels.
Adriana Vazquez, 48, climbed a rough path strewn with stones and mud to see if anything was left of a relative’s house.
What she found was a jumble of wood and tin houses levelled by a landslide. Soldiers were using a backhoe to remove a pile of debris from the street.
Her relative “answered the telephone,” Vasquez said, but she could hardly hear anything and hopes that was due to a poor connection.
About 100 small communities are incommunicado due to road closures and power outages that have made telephone contact and travel difficult.
Mexico has been hit by particularly heavy rains throughout 2025, with a rainfall record set in the capital, Mexico City.
Meteorologist Isidro Cano told AFP that the intense rainfall since Thursday was caused by a seasonal shift and cloud formation as warm, humid air from the Gulf of Mexico rises to the mountaintops.


African Union calls for urgent action in insurgency-hit Mali

African Union calls for urgent action in insurgency-hit Mali
Updated 44 sec ago
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African Union calls for urgent action in insurgency-hit Mali

African Union calls for urgent action in insurgency-hit Mali
BAMAKO: The African Union has called for an urgent international response, including intelligence-sharing, to address worsening security conditions in Mali, where insurgents are imposing a fuel blockade and kidnapping foreigners.
An Al Qaeda-linked jihadist group active in West Africa’s Sahel region has blocked fuel imports since September, attacking convoys of tankers and creating a shortage that forced schools and businesses to shut.
The latest show of force by the group, Jama’at Nusrat Al-Islam wal-Muslimin, has raised concern that it might eventually try to impose its rule over the landlocked country. Western countries including the US, France, Britain and Italy are urging their citizens to leave.
In a statement on Sunday, Mahmoud Ali Youssouf, chairperson of the African Union Commission, expressed “deep concern over the rapidly deteriorating security situation in Mali, where terrorist groups have imposed blockades, disrupted access to essential supplies, and severely worsened humanitarian conditions for civilian populations.”
He said there should be “enhanced cooperation, intelligence-sharing and sustained support” for countries in the Sahel affected by violent extremism.
He also called for the immediate release of three Egyptian nationals he said were recently kidnapped.
JNIM has targeted foreign nationals for kidnapping to finance its operations in West Africa.
Reuters reported in October that a deal was reached to free two citizens of the United Arab Emirates in exchange for a ransom payment of roughly $50 million.
Schools re-opened in the capital Bamako on Monday, a Reuters witness said, after being suspended for two weeks because of the fuel shortage.