Portofino Resort- Now with a new BEACH BAR!!
Ambergris Caye Caye Caulker HELP! Visitor Center Businesses
BelizeNews.com BelizeSearch.com BelizePhotographs.com Lodging

Page 3 of 3 < 1 2 3
Topic Options
#207600 - 10/25/05 02:27 PM Re: cancun/ cozumel conditions - wilma
Marty Administrator Offline

Top
#207601 - 10/25/05 03:49 PM Re: cancun/ cozumel conditions - wilma
Marty Administrator Offline
30,000 Tourists Still Stranded in Mexico
Oct 25 7:47 AM US/Eastern

By WILL WEISSERT
Associated Press Writer

CANCUN, Mexico

Hurricane Wilma is long gone, but those it left stranded on Mexico's Caribbean coast are tired, fed up and ready to go home after spending the better part of a week in foul-smelling shelters.

President Vicente Fox said getting the tourists home _ and then getting them back again by the start of tourism's high season in December _ was one of Mexico's highest national priorities, given that Cancun attracts so many tourist dollars.

On Monday, buses began ferrying hundreds of tourists out of Cancun to Merida, about 170 miles to the west, where they may be able to wrangle homebound flights.

About 1,200 Americans and a busload of Britons were among the first evacuated by bus. Officials said they hoped to open the Cancun airport by Tuesday. Still, almost 30,000 tourist remained stranded along the resort-studded coast.

"They should bring down transports. The conditions are getting worse, and people are going to start getting sick," said Tom Dinonno, 48, of Levittown, N.Y., as his wife Karen struggled to make a credit-card call from a Cancun pay phone.

When the call finally went through after 20 minutes, they got their son's answering machine _ and silent tears started to stream down Karen's cheeks.

Desperation like that echoed across the flooded, looted Cancun. A curfew was declared on Monday night, and police cars drove through the city, their lights flashing, barking orders over their loudspeakers for people to return to their homes.

"People are desperate. They are nervous," Fox said.

He said the country's first priority was to get enough food and water to the coast, and he dispatched Mexican military ships, planes and trucks to bring supplies. He said the second priority was to get tourists home.

"I feel the Mexican government is helping here to an extent, doing the best they can," said Kevin Riley, town finance administrator for Paw Paw, Mich. "But the U.S. has done nothing. Where is our government? They are only preparing for Florida. They forgot about us."

Soldiers and federal police took to Cancun's streets Monday after looters emptied entire blocks of stores, taking television sets, clothes, beer and even pizza delivery motorcycles. Police said about 200 people had been arrested.

The fact that the skies finally cleared in Cancun only made the waiting more unbearable.

"It's like, the sun's out, let's go, and we're still here," said Lynn Wickum, of San Francisco, Calif., as she drank a beer at one of the few Cancun bars that finally opened. "We feel the frustration building. You wouldn't want to make a scene, but at the same time, you're ready to go home."

Many of Cancun's own 500,000 residents had lost nearly everything in flooded or destroyed homes.

For two days, Hurricane Wilma turned Cancun's string of luxury hotels into an expensive breakwater, leaving their lobbies heaped with shattered metal, marble and glass, their gardens a swath of muck.

The booming string of Caribbean hotels anchored by Cancun produce almost half of Mexico's $11 billion in yearly foreign tourism revenue, and they constitute a significant element in Mexico's balance of trade.

"It is going to take us a couple of months to have 80, 90 percent of the tourism capacity of Cancun working," Fox said in a televised interview as he stood before cars sloshing through still-flooded streets.

"We're approaching the full tourist season. So speed is fundamental," he added.

Full recovery could take until Easter week, according to Ana Patricia Morales, vice president of the Cancun Hotels Association.

Only six people were known to have been killed by Wilma in Mexico, Fox said, adding to the 13 who died earlier in Jamaica and Haiti. At least six people died in Florida, bringing storm's overall toll to 25.

Top
#207602 - 11/01/05 01:51 PM Re: cancun/ cozumel conditions - wilma
Marty Administrator Offline
Thought you might like a little update from Villa Las Brisas of Isla
Mujeres. Things have been progressing quickly. Curtis & I are fine and
back together on Isla Mujeres. This hurricane had a huge punch to it,
and yes we did get damage. Our neighbor, a geologist, figured Isla had
216 mph sustained winds and gusts to 250 mph. . . We've never seen
anything like it in our lives and it lasted for 13 hours. . . plus 1
day before and 1 day after of 125 mph winds. The Palapero's (workers
for the thatch roofing) are going to be done in one week (half is
already finished), and the other part is really just major clean up
which is almost done. So our place is already looking great now.

Since the get go, the Navy trucks were out delivering food and water
to the locals who didn't prepare good enough. Thank goodness because
none of them were really prepared for such a long, powerful storm. As
of today, Isla Mujeres has water and telephones (unless it got ripped
from the house by a falling power pole like ours) and holes have been
dug for the new power poles, which are waiting to be strung starting
tomorrow. Downtown electricity is already on and tomorrow they'll make
there way to the south point. Hidalgo (restaurant row) restaurants were
open Saturday night, and there was a fiesta in the town square too.
Everyone is pitching in together in good ole Isla Mujeres to get her
back to normal. . . . and we are absolutely amazed at how fast
everything is coming together. Once electricity is on-line. . . we will
be open for business and margarita's.

I cannot begin to tell you how much your information and contact has
meant to us. Communication is still difficult for us until we get our
phone line hooked back up by Miguel & Luis, but that will be soon.
Isla will be up and running in no time.

Salud!
Ashley & Curtis
Villa Las Brisas
Isla Mujeres, Mexico

Top
Page 3 of 3 < 1 2 3


Links
Big Chat

Media
SanPedroDaily.com
SanPedroSun.net
AmbergrisToday.com
BelizeNews.com

Blogs
Tacogirl
Colette & Maya
Bubba's Bird
Ambergris Today
San Pedro Sun
Tina's Island Life
(Live Video feed)
Caye Caulker
Chronicles

More Blogs....

Search thousands of Belizean-only websites
Low Air Fares
Mini Chat

December
Su M Tu W Th F Sa
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31
Forum Stats
12536 Members
34 Forums
28614 Topics
296289 Posts

Max Online: 1262 @ 06/10/07 12:16 PM
Cayo Espanto
Click for Cayo Espanto, and have your own private island
Belize-Trips.com
Click for exciting and adventurous tours of Belize with Katie Valk!
ScubaLessonsBelize
Click for excellent scuba lessons with Elbert Greer!
Bookstore
Online purchase of Belizean related books
Who's Online
1 registered (1 invisible), 5 Guests and 8 Spiders online.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod

free counters




AmbergrisCaye.com CayeCaulker.org HELP! Visitor Center Goods & Services San Pedro Town
BelizeSearch.com Message Board Lodging Diving Fishing Things to Do History
BelizeNews.com Maps Phonebook Belize Business Directory
BelizeCards.com SanPedroDaily.com Picture of the Day