Mayan Towns Become Mass Graves
Guatemalan Officials Will Abandon Communities Buried By Landslides
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Villagers try to get a hand on the food being distributed by the Guatemalan Army in the flooding ravaged communities near Puerto San Jose, Escuintla, 68 miles south of Guatemala City, Sunday. (AP)
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A Mayan woman cries in a mudslide area in Panabaj, 111 miles south of Guatemala City Saturday. (AP)
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Rescue workers carry the body of a child that was found dead after a mudslide in Panabaj, 111 miles south from Guatemala City Friday. (AP)
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Villagers look at homes and cars destroyed after a mudslide in Panabaj, 111 miles south of Guatemala City, Guatemala, Friday. (AP)
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Photo Essay Hurricane Stan A major storm brings rainfall and deadly mudslides to Central America.
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Fast Facts Guatemala Learn about the people, economy and history.
The newest figures included a landslide in western Guatemala, along the border with Mexico, that killed 37 people.
Guatemala has borne the brunt of heavy rains exacerbated by Hurricane Stan, which made landfall Tuesday on the Mexican Gulf Coast before quickly weakening to a tropical depression.
Governments in Central America and Mexico were still struggling Saturday to reach isolated areas devastated by a week of intense rains and landslides.
On the banks of the mountain Lake Atitlan, dozens of Mayan Indian villagers swarmed over a vast river of congealed mud that covered trees and houses, digging with hand tools for bodies under a landslide that swallowed an entire neighborhood.
Primitive wooden coffins piled up in the cemetery in Santiago Atitlan, waiting for badly decomposed bodies. Villagers held sprigs of native herbs to ward off odors as they dug mass graves for bodies that would be buried without names.
"Entire families have disappeared," said Diego Sojuel, of the Santiago Atitlan municipal aid committee. "In some cases there is no one that can identify the cadavers. And in other cases it is because of the state of putrification that we are going to have to bury them without names."
Chris Needham, 24, of London, paused to wonder aloud whether some areas might eventually have to be declared a burial ground.
"That's people's families under there," he said. "They're not going to stop digging. I wouldn't stop."
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