Big storms hit Mexico
- 1/46
Big storms hit Mexico
REUTERS/Jacobo Garcia - 2/46
Big storms hit Mexico
REUTERS/Tomas Bravo - 3/46
Big storms hit Mexico
REUTERS/Henry Romero - 4/46
Big storms hit Mexico
REUTERS/Henry Romero - 5/46
Big storms hit Mexico
REUTERS/Henry Romero - 6/46
Big storms hit Mexico
REUTERS/Henry Romero - 7/46
Big storms hit Mexico
REUTERS/Henry Romero - 8/46
Big storms hit Mexico
REUTERS/Henry Romero - 9/46
Big storms hit Mexico
REUTERS/Henry Romero - 10/46
Big storms hit Mexico
REUTERS/Henry Romero - 11/46
Big storms hit Mexico
REUTERS/Henry Romero - 12/46
Big storms hit Mexico
REUTERS/Henry Romero - 13/46
Big storms hit Mexico
REUTERS/Jacobo Garcia - 14/46
Big storms hit Mexico
REUTERS/Claudio Vargas - 15/46
Big storms hit Mexico
REUTERS/Fidel Martinez - 16/46
Big storms hit Mexico
REUTERS/Tomas Bravo - 17/46
Big storms hit Mexico
REUTERS/Tomas Bravo - 18/46
Big storms hit Mexico
REUTERS/Fidel Martinez - 19/46
Flooding in Mexico
REUTERS - 20/46
Flooding in Mexico
REUTERS/Oscar Martinez - 21/46
Flooding in Mexico
REUTERS/Tomas Bravo - 22/46
Flooding in Mexico
REUTERS/Tomas Bravo - 23/46
Flooding in Mexico
REUTERS/Tomas Bravo - 24/46
Flooding in Mexico
REUTERS/Jacobo Garcia - 25/46
Flooding in Mexico
REUTERS/Tomas Bravo - 26/46
Flooding in Mexico
REUTERS/Tomas Bravo - 27/46
Flooding in Mexico
REUTERS/Tomas Bravo - 28/46
Flooding in Mexico
REUTERS/Tomas Bravo - 29/46
Flooding in Mexico
REUTERS - 30/46
Flooding in Mexico
REUTERS/Camilo Martinez - 31/46
Flooding in Mexico
REUTERS/Jorge Luis Plata - 32/46
Flooding in Mexico
REUTERS/Jorge Luis Plata - 33/46
Flooding in Mexico
REUTERS/Jacobo Garcia - 34/46
Flooding in Mexico
REUTERS/Jacobo Garcia - 35/46
Flooding in Mexico
REUTERS/Oscar Martinez - 36/46
Flooding in Mexico
REUTERS/Stringer - 37/46
Flooding in Mexico
REUTERS/Jacobo Garcia - 38/46
Flooding in Mexico
REUTERS/Jacobo Garcia - 39/46
Flooding in Mexico
REUTERS/Jacobo Garcia - 40/46
People walk through flooded streets in Acapulco
REUTERS - 41/46
People walk through flooded streets in Acapulco
REUTERS - 42/46
A dead pig lies among debris on a beach in Acapulco
REUTERS - 43/46
Soldiers lift a portion of a bus out of the mud after it was buried by a mountain landslide in Altotonga in Veracruz stat
REUTERS - 44/46
People stand in a house flooded by mud after a mountain landslide in Altotonga in Veracruz state
REUTERS - 45/46
Soldiers search for survivors after a bus and two nearby houses were buried by a mountain landslide in Altotonga in Veracruz state
REUTERS - 46/46
Soldiers and police work around the wreckage of a bus after it was buried by a mountain landslide at Altotonga in Veracruz state
REUTERS
Updated
Human nature is sharing the blame with Mother Nature in Mexico for the destruction spawned by twin storms, with critics pointing to shoddy construction, endemic corruption and political wheeling-and-dealing.
The country was thrashed last week by a rare tag team of tropical storms on opposite coasts, Manuel and Ingrid, that killed at least 123 people, damaged 72 roads and affected 1.5 million homes to various degrees. (AFP)