No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeNewsCosta RicaCentral America evaluates the destruction caused by cyclone Eta

Central America evaluates the destruction caused by cyclone Eta

Central America, which is still being affected by bad weather, on Friday began assessing the destruction caused by Hurricane Eta, which left dozens of deaths, buried houses, overflowing rivers and landslides before heading back to the Caribbean.

The countries of the isthmus remained covered in fog or light rains Friday, a relief after the downpours that Eta caused in the region since Tuesday, when it made landfall in Nicaragua’s North Caribbean as a powerful Category 4 hurricane.

The cyclone left northern Honduras on Thursday afternoon as a tropical depression and returned to the Caribbean, where it could strengthen again into a tropical storm as it moves toward Cuba, according to projections from the United States’ National Hurricane Center (NHC).

Cuban authorities began to prepare to face the cyclone, which will hit the island Sunday.

In Guatemala, which suffered more than 50 deaths from landslides in impoverished areas in the north and northwest of the country, relief authorities alerted the population of more rains.

“The rains will continue for three or four more days,” mainly in northeast Guatemala, David de León, spokesman for the Disaster Reduction Coordinator (Conred), told AFP.

Relief teams have not been able to reach the Quejá village, in the northern department of Alta Verapaz, where according to Guatemalan president Alejandro Giammattei, more than 50 people were killed by a landslide that buried about 20 houses.

De León said that hundreds of people remain at risk, 18 are missing and 4,724 are sheltered in Guatemala.

Isolated communities

In Nicaragua, where Eta arrived with powerful winds and downpours that left houses and buildings without roofs and uprooted trees, the rain persisted Friday in the Pacific and the north of the country, while rivers in the Caribbean continue to rise, according to authorities.

Local media reported that the town of Bilwi, where Eta struck, remains isolated by the rising Wawa River — which can only be crossed by barge — while residents try to rebuild their houses.

The cyclone caused the death of two miners in the Nicaraguan Caribbean, although authorities have not fully surveyed the damage caused by Eta, acknowledged the vice president and government spokesperson, Rosario Murillo.

In Honduras, eight people died as a result of landslides and floods, although Marvin Aparicio, of the Permanent Contingency Commission (Copeco) admitted that there could be more victims.

More than 7,000 people had to be sheltered and thousands more remain incommunicado due to flooding in the northern Sula Valley, the industrial center of Honduras.

Residents of that area called into television channels to ask for help or evacuations.

“We need a boat or helicopter. We have two days without food, we are about 60 people with children,” complained a woman who called this Friday from Ciudad Planeta, near the San Pedro Sula airport, to the newscast Today.

Population relocated

In Panama, the damage was concentrated in the province of Chiriquí, on the border with Costa Rica, where five people — including three children — died in mudslides. Civil protection authorities fear that there are more victims.

In Chiriquí, the storm caused the greatest damage, destroying homes, roads, bridges and crops, according to the Panamanian government.

In Costa Rica, two people were killed by a landslide that buried their house Thursday in the canton of Coto Brus, bordering Panama, while 20 roads were cut off, according to the National Emergency Commission (CNE).

Around 1,400 people were transferred to shelters, especially in the south and the Pacific coast, where the rains left by Eta provoked overflowing rivers that flooded large areas of Costa Rica.

In El Salvador, a fisherman died, and some 1,700 people remain sheltered due to the risk of flooding, according to authorities there.

Climate change produces an increase in temperature in the surface layers of the oceans, which generates more powerful hurricanes and storms and with greater amount of water, constituting a more dangerous threat for coastal communities, according to studies from the Intergovernmental Group of Experts on the Climate Change (IPCC).

Trending Now

Argentina’s Francisco Cerundolo Makes Tennis History with Queen’s Club Title

Argentina's Francisco Cerundolo claimed the biggest title of his career on Sunday, beating American Tommy Paul 6-7 (4), 6-4, 6-3 to win the HSBC...

Costa Rica Removes Seven Police Directors After Polygraph Tests

Costa Rica’s government removed seven police directors from confidence posts on Monday after they did not pass polygraph tests tied to the administration’s security...

Rip Currents, High Surf Threaten Costa Rica’s Caribbean Coast

Those heading to Costa Rica’s Caribbean coast this week are being urged to use caution as higher surf, rip currents and a pair of...

Messi Makes World Cup History as Argentina Opens Title Defense

Lionel Messi began what could be his final World Cup with another night that belonged entirely to him. The Argentina captain scored a hat...

On Father’s Day Costa Rica Quietly Rethinks What It Means to Be a Dad

Costa Rica celebrates Father's Day today and anyone who spent August here will notice the difference immediately: the third Sunday of June arrives with...

Costa Rica Airport Travelers Now Have a New Uber Taxi Option

A notable shift just landed for anyone flying into Costa Rica’s airport in San Jose. As of this week, travelers opening the Uber app...

Costa Rica Residency Delays in 2026: What Foreign Residents Should Expect

For many foreigners planning to live in Costa Rica, the residency process in 2026 has required one essential quality: patience. Applicants are currently facing delays...

Colombia Shifts Right as Abelardo de la Espriella Wins Presidency

Millionaire attorney Abelardo de la Espriella will govern Colombia aligned with the principles of a right wing that is regaining ground across the continent,...

Costa Rica Celebrates Father’s Day the Tico Way — Slowly and Together

Across Costa Rica today, you're going to get the smell of slow-cooked meat drifting over backyard walls, while abuelo (grandfather) is being handed the...
🌴 The Weekly Pura Vida

Costa Rica, Once a Week

The week's top stories, weather & insider tips — delivered every Sunday. One email, zero clutter.

🔒 Free. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

Loading…

Latest News from Costa Rica

Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Car Rentals
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel