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Updated: 11:57 p.m. Friday, Sept. 20, 2013 | Posted: 11:56 p.m. Friday, Sept. 20, 2013

Mexico looks for landslide victims, chopper

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Grief strikes tiny Mexican village after landslide photo
Residents from the village La Pintada rest inside the Acapulco Convention Center after their town was affected by flooding, in Acapulco, Mexico, Thursday, Sept. 19, 2013. Tropical Storm Manuel, the same storm that devastated Acapulco and the surrounding area, gained hurricane force and rolled into the northern state of Sinaloa on Thursday before starting to weaken, falling again to tropical storm strength. (AP Photo/Michael Weissenstein)
Grief strikes tiny Mexican village after landslide photo
Nancy Gomez, 21, an injured resident of La Pintada, and her 1-year-old baby, receive medical attention in a shelter at the Convention Center in Acapulco, Mexico, Thursday, Sept. 19, 2013. Federal police rescued more than 300 people from La Pintada after it was hit by a landslide Monday afternoon, but officials said at least 58 people were missing and presumed dead. Gomez said that she heard a strange sound and went to look out the doorway of her family's house, her baby clutched in her arms. She saw the ground move, then felt a jolt from behind as her father tried to push her to safety. She never saw him again. (AP Photo/Michael Weissenstein)
Grief strikes tiny Mexican village after landslide photo
Residents of the storm-battered southern Mexican state of Guerrero use the courtesy phones provided at a temporary shelter in the Convention Center in Acapulco, Mexico, Thursday, Sept. 19, 2013. Hundreds were in the shelter, including several hundred from a village hit by a landslide Monday afternoon, where officials said at least 58 people were missing and presumed dead. (AP Photo/Michael Weissenstein)
Grief strikes tiny Mexican village after landslide photo
Nancy Gomez, 21, an injured resident of La Pintada, and her 1-year-old baby, receive medical attention in a shelter at the Convention Center in Acapulco, Mexico, Thursday, Sept. 19, 2013. Federal police rescued more than 300 people from La Pintada after it was hit by a landslide Monday afternoon, but officials said at least 58 people were missing and presumed dead. Gomez said that she heard a strange sound and went to look out the doorway of her family's house, her baby clutched in her arms. She saw the ground move, then felt a jolt from behind as her father tried to push her to safety. She never saw him again. (AP Photo/Michael Weissenstein)
Mexico looks for landslide victims, chopper photo
In this photo released by Mexico's Secretary of the Interior, structures lay in ruins at the site of a landslide in the village of La Pintada, Mexico, Thursday, Sept. 19, 2013. La Pintada was was affected by the twin paths of Tropical Storm Manuel and Hurricane Ingrid, which simultaneously pounded both of Mexico's coasts over the weekend, triggering floods and landslides across coastal and inland areas. (AP Photo/Mexico's Secretary of the Interior)
Mexico looks for landslide victims, chopper photo
A woman cleans shoes after her home was affected by flooding during Tropical Storm Manuel in Chilpancingo, Mexico, Thursday, Sept. 19, 2013. Manuel, the same storm that devastated Acapulco, gained hurricane force and rolled into the northern state of Sinaloa on Thursday before starting to weaken. (AP Photo/Alejandrino Gonzalez)
Mexico looks for landslide victims, chopper photo
Residents use a makeshift zip line to cross after a bridge collapsed under the force of the rains caused by Tropical Storm Manuel near the town of Petaquillas, Mexico, Wednesday, Sept. 18, 2013. The toll from devastating twin storms climbed to 80 on Wednesday as isolated areas reported deaths and damage to the outside world, and Mexican officials said that a massive landslide in the mountains north of Acapulco could drive the number of confirmed dead even higher. (AP Photo/Alejandrino Gonzalez)
Mexico looks for landslide victims, chopper photo
Residents from the village La Pintada are shuttled from a temporary shelter at the convention center to another shelter, in Acapulco, Mexico, Thursday, Sept. 19, 2013. Federal police rescued more than 300 people from La Pintada after it was hit by a landslide Monday afternoon. It was the biggest known tragedy caused by twin weekend storms that struck Mexico, creating floods and landslides across the nation and killing at least 97 people as of Thursday - not counting those missing in La Pintada. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo)
Mexico looks for landslide victims, chopper photo
A bridge is collapsed along the Guadalupe River near the town of Lomas de Chapultepec, Mexico, Friday, Sept. 20, 2013. Massive flooding caused by Tropical Storm Manuel washed out bridges and collapsed highways throughout the area, cutting Acapulco off by land and stranding thousands. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo)

By MICHAEL WEISSENSTEIN

The Associated Press

ACAPULCO, Mexico —

Mexican soldiers dug through tons of mud and dirt in search of victims of a massive landslide, as authorities looked for a federal police helicopter that went missing while carrying out relief operations on the flood-stricken Pacific coast.

The helicopter with three crew members on board was returning from the remote mountain village of La Pintada, where the mudslide occurred, when it went missing Thursday. There is still no sign of it, said Interior Secretary Miguel Angel Osorio Chong.

"They risked their lives all the time," Osorio Chong said. "We are truly worried."

Using picks and shovels, soldiers and farmers removed dirt and rock from atop the cement or corrugated-metal roofs of houses looking for bodies in this town north of Acapulco, where 68 people were reported missing following Monday's slide. Others carried away pieces of trees, wood and other debris.

Two bodies have been recovered, but it was unclear if they were among those on the list of missing.

In a press conference late Friday night, President Enrique Pena Nieto and several of his top ministers announced that the confirmed death toll from the flooding and landslides brought by the twin weekend storms of Manuel and Ingrid had risen to 101 from 97. The figure does not include the 68 missing.

Authorities said they have evacuated 58,000 tourists from Acapulco in Guerrero state and they will continue to fly people out of the resort until Sunday when they expect its airport to be functioning again.

"Guerrero has been the state with the biggest damage and that's why I will remain here, I will be here this weekend," said Pena Nieto.

Guerrero Gov. Angel Aguirre said authorities still haven't been able to reach two mountain communities because of bad weather.

Federal police have been helping move emergency supplies and aid victims of Tropical Storm Manuel, which washed out bridges and collapsed highways throughout the area, cutting Acapulco off by land. At least 500,000 residents of the resort city didn't have running water, authorities said.

The country's Transportation Department said that a patchwork connection of roads leading to Mexico City had been partially reopened around midday Friday. Part of the main toll highway, however, remain blocked by collapsed tunnels and mudslides, so drivers were being shunted to a smaller non-toll highway that is in better shape on some stretches.

Yet so badly damaged was that route that traffic was allowed through only in small groups escorted by federal police, and in only one direction: outward bound from Acapulco.

Thousands of cars, trucks and buses lined up at the edge of Acapulco, waiting to get out of the flood- and shortage-stricken city.

"We're a little calmer now. We've spent six days stranded, waiting to get out," said Armando Herrera, a tourist from Mexico state, outside of Mexico City, as he waited in his car to be allowed on to the newly reopened road.

Survivors of the La Pintada landslide staying at a shelter in Acapulco recounted how a tidal wave of dirt, rocks and trees exploded off the hill, sweeping through the center of town, burying families in their homes and sweeping wooden houses into the bed of the swollen river that winds past the village on its way to the Pacific.

"Everyone who could ran into the coffee fields. It smothered the homes and sent them into the river. Half the homes in town were smothered and buried," said Marta Alvarez, a 22-year-old homemaker who was cooking with her 2-year-old son, two brothers and parents when the landslide struck.

La Pintada was the scene of the single greatest tragedy in destruction wreaked by the twin storms, which simultaneously pounded both of Mexico's coasts, spawning huge floods and landslides across hundreds of miles of coastal and inland areas.

Manuel later gained hurricane force and rolled into the northern state of Sinaloa on Thursday morning before weakening over land.

Three people were reported dead in Sinaloa: a fisherman swept from his boat, a small boy who fell into a ditch and a young man whose vehicle was swept away by flood waters that reached waist-deep in some places in Culiacan, the Sinaloa state capital.

Pena Nieto said he was cancelling a trip to New York for the annual U.N. General Assembly because of the emergency. U.S. Vice President Joe Biden, visiting Mexico City for a Friday meeting with Pena Nieto, offered U.S. help in flood recovery and relief efforts.

Federal officials set up donation centers for storm aid Thursday, but they faced stiff questioning about why, instead of warning people more energetically about the oncoming storms, they focused on Independence Day celebrations and a military parade that kept dozens of aircraft and emergency vehicles in Mexico City.

___

Associated Press writers Martin Duran in Culiacan and E. Eduardo Castillo, Adriana Gomez Licon and Mark Stevenson in Mexico City contributed to this report.

____

Michael Weissenstein on Twitter: https://twitter.com/mweissenstein

Copyright The Associated Press

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