The heaviest blow yesterday fell on the southern coastal state of Guerrero, where Mexico's government reported 14 confirmed deaths. State officials said people had been killed in landslides, drownings in a swollen river and a truck crash on a rain-slickened mountain highway.
Mexico's federal Civil Protection coordinator, Luis Felipe Puente, told reporters late yesterday that stormy weather from one or both of the two systems also caused three deaths in Hidalgo, three in Puebla and one in Oaxaca.
The US National Hurricane Center said Ingrid, the second hurricane of the Atlantic storm season, could reach the mainland by today morning or early afternoon, most likely along the lightly populated coast north of the port of Tampico.
Authorities in the Gulf states of Tamaulipas and Veracruz evacuated more than 7,000 people from low-lying areas as the hurricane closed in, and the prospect of severe weather prompted some communities to cancel Independence Day celebrations planned for Sunday and Monday.
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The rains caused some rivers to overflow in Guerrero, damaging hundreds of homes and disrupting communications for several hours.
Early today, Manuel's remnants had maximum sustained winds of about 45 kph and was moving to the northwest at 13 kph. It was about 10 kilometers west of Puerto Vallarta.
Ingrid also was expected to bring very heavy rains. It had maximum sustained winds of 120 kph early today and was centered about 155 kilometers north-northeast of the port city of Tampico as it moved west-northwest at 11 kph. A hurricane warning was in effect from Cabo Rojo to La Pesca.