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Hurricane Mitch was the most destructive storm in the Atlantic Basin in the past 200 years. It reached sustained wind speeds of 180 mph while moving into the western Caribbean but the main destruction resulted from intense rainfall.

During the week of October 26, 1998, Hurricane Mitch, one of the strongest and most damaging storms ever to hit the Caribbean and Central America, swept across Honduras, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Guatemala, Belize and Costa Rica. The loss of life and devastation to property from the torrential rains, floods and landslides was enormous. Effects of the natural disaster were intensified by man-made factors. Large-scale deforestation and cultivation of marginal land induced by population pressure triggered massive mudslides. Flooding was exacerbated by lack of adequate watershed management. The rural poor, with limited access to land, often live in marginal, high-risk areas, and thus bore the brunt of the effects of the disaster.