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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkNews Around the Republic of Mexico | September 2005 

Mexican Marines Get Down To Work
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A firefighter carries a crucifix to the altar at the start of a Catholic Mass in New Orleans, Louisiana.
The Marines have landed in Biloxi. The Mexican Marines.

Marines from Mexico, the Netherlands and the United States are allies in an international Hurricane Katrina cleanup effort based on ships about 20 miles offshore in the Gulf of Mexico. Four Canadian ships are on the way.

"Our president called George Bush, and three days later we came here," said Óscar Martínez Pretelin, an officer aboard the Papaloapan, a 440 foot-long, troop-landing ship. "We are honored to help the United States."

About 75 Mexican Marines landed this week on the beach just east of the Beau Rivage casino to begin cleaning up Biloxi, Miss., especially around schools and churches.

One of the Marines, Mario T. Rodríguez, said he left a small city in the far south of Mexico to volunteer for hurricane relief duty. He has a 3-month-old daughter with his wife at home.

"The U.S. is rich, but even a rich country can need help," he said.

The Marines will be aided by Spanish-speaking crew members of the USS Bataan as they work in the devastated areas of Biloxi and Gulfport.

For the first time in the history of the Mexican military, women have been assigned a mission, said Lt. Leonardo Tun Humbert of the Papaloapan: Three female physicians and two nurses from the Mexican navy are aboard the ship waiting to be assigned to hurricane relief work.

"We are trained to help and we will help," said Sgt. Carmen Rodríguez Cruz, 26, a nurse from Veracruz.

They got a bit of a culture shock when they met Capt. Nora Tyson, the commander of the Bataan. The 844-foot ship is equipped with six helicopters that began rescue operations in New Orleans the day after Katrina struck, then was sent to Biloxi on Thursday.

"We were surprised to find a woman commanding a ship," said Pretelin, the Mexican navy fleet officer. "We found her very professional, very well mannered."

"It's the same hard job for a woman as it is for a man," said Tyson, with a smile.



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