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.