A week after floods, swathes of central Mexico reel from devastation
[October 16, 2025]
By FÉLIX MÁRQUEZ
POZA RICA, Mexico (AP) — The stench of decay spread for several miles
around Poza Rica on Wednesday, one of the areas hardest hit by last
week’s torrential rains that flooded central and eastern Mexico.
In the center of this oil-producing city near the Gulf of Mexico, a
lingering cloud of dust hovered over the main avenue where soldiers
worked nonstop. Farther east, near the Cazones River — which overflowed
on Friday — several streets still lay under 3 feet (1 meter) of water
and mud, topped by another 6 feet (2 meters) of piled-up trash,
furniture, and debris.
“A week later, this looks horrible — worse. You can’t even cross the
street,” lamented Ana Luz Saucedo, who fled with her children when the
water came rushing in “like the sea.”
Now she fears infection because, in addition to the garbage and mud,
there’s a corpse near her house that still hasn’t been collected, she
said. “The dead body has already started to rot, and no one has come for
him."
The toll of last week’s devastating rains, floods and landslides
continues to become more clear as Mexico's government chugs along on
rescue and recovery efforts.
As of Wednesday, the government recorded 66 deaths, while the number of
missing people climbed to 75. Nearly 200 communities remain cut off —
most of them in the central mountainous region of Hidalgo, where
helicopters have struggled to reach them because of constant cloud
cover.
Authorities have attributed the disaster to the convergence of several
weather systems — two tropical systems along with a cold and a warm
front — that hit just as a particularly intense rainy season was ending,
leaving rivers saturated and hillsides weakened.

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People traverse a flooded street, in Poza Rica, Veracruz state,
Mexico, Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025, after torrential rain. (AP
Photo/Felix Marquez)

But residents like Saucedo believe the warnings came too late — at
least in Poza Rica.
“Many people died because they didn’t give notice — really, they
didn’t warn us,” she said. “They came only when the river was
already overflowing … not before, so people could evacuate.”
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said this week that alert
systems for such events don’t work the same way as those used for
hurricanes. However, she acknowledged that once the emergency phase
ends, officials will need to review river maintenance and emergency
protocols to determine “what worked, what we need to improve and
whether there are better alert mechanisms.”
Emergency deployments of soldiers, marines and civilian teams
continued across the hardest-hit states, alongside aid from hundreds
of volunteers.
In Poza Rica, for example, a group of women who came from the port
city of Veracruz distributed clothing and 1,000 tamales they had
prepared for the flood victims.
Meanwhile, authorities are working to restore access on dozens of
blocked roads and to bring back electricity, while also monitoring
dams — many of which are now at maximum capacity.
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