Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
An overturned truck is seen on a highway following the passing of Hurricane Roslyn that hit the Mexico's Pacific coast on Sunday.
An overturned truck is seen on a highway following the passing of Hurricane Roslyn that hit the Mexico's Pacific coast on Sunday. Photograph: Reuters
An overturned truck is seen on a highway following the passing of Hurricane Roslyn that hit the Mexico's Pacific coast on Sunday. Photograph: Reuters

Two dead after Hurricane Roslyn hits Mexico Pacific coast

This article is more than 1 year old

Roslyn hit land as category 3 hurricane before weakening as it headed inland

Two people died on Sunday from destruction caused by tropical storm Roslyn after it made landfall along Mexico’s Pacific coast as a powerful hurricane before weakening farther inland, authorities said.

A 74-year-old man was killed in the town of Mexcaltitan de Santiago Ixcuintla when a beam fell on his head, Nayarit state’s ministry of security and citizen protection said. A 39-year-old woman died when a fence collapsed in the state’s Rosamorada district.

According to the US National Hurricane Center (NHC), Roslyn hit land as a category 3 hurricane at 5.20am local time near Santa Cruz in northern Nayarit, a Pacific coastal state home to popular tourist beaches like Sayulita and Punta Mita.

By the afternoon, Roslyn was downgraded to a tropical storm with maximum sustained winds decreasing to near 45mph (75km/h), the NHC said. Roslyn was forecast to become a tropical depression by Sunday evening and dissipate overnight or early Monday.

Images from Nayarit after Roslyn made landfall showed cars submerged and houses with major damage to roofs and outdoor coverings. Emergency officials were dispatched to the most affected areas, the state’s civil security agency said.

Only minor damage was reported in neighbouring Jalisco, according to the state’s governor. The busy international Puerto Vallarta airport resumed all operations.

Some people who evacuated had returned to their homes. Officials were working to restore power in areas that experienced outages.

Beaches along the coast remained closed. The NHC warned of swells that were “likely to cause life-threatening surf and rip current conditions”.

Heavy rainfall was expected to continue in some areas of the storm’s path, the NHC said. Rain could lead to flash flooding and landslides in areas of rugged terrain, the center warned.

Most viewed

Most viewed