A violent storm that hit Central America over the weekend has killed at least 113 people and left a swath of destruction.
Tropical Storm Agatha is the first storm of the season and has been especially fierce in Guatemala, where mudslides have caused many casualties.
Guatemalan President Alvaro Colom told reporters that the storm killed 92 people in his country.
Among the dead were four children in a house that was swept away in a landslide.
Honduras reported its death toll as 12, while a further nine have died in El Salvador.
Tens of thousands of people are in shelters, either because their homes have been destroyed or they were forced to flee from possible flooding.
International aid is beginning to increase. France has said it is sending humanitarian supplies and issued a statement expressing its condolences to the affected countries.
Colombia and the US offered to send aircraft to ferry aid or help with evacuations of storm-hit areas.
President Colom said six US military aircraft had been deployed from a base in Honduras.
Mexican President Felipe Calderon offered the airport in the border city of Tapachula for emergency flights in and out of Guatemala.
In Guatemala, which has been under a state of emergency since Saturday, 112,000 people were forced to flee their homes because of floods and mudslides.
Honduras and El Salvador have also declared nationwide states of emergency.
More than 8,000 people were forced to leave their homes in El Salvador, and more than 3,000 in Honduras.