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22127: erzilidanto: . Grief as Haitians and Dominicans Tally Flood Toll (fwd)
From: Erzilidanto@aol.com
. Grief as Haitians and Dominicans Tally Flood Toll
>
> May 28, 2004
> By TIM WEINER and LYDIA POLGREEN
>
>
> SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic, May 27 - Aid workers,
> soldiers and villagers struggled to save the living, find
> the lost and bury the dead in Haiti and the Dominican
> Republic on Thursday after floods that took everything in
> their path.
>
> "We have nothing left," said Socorro Moquete, a 67-year-old
> grandmother in Jimaní, the most devastated town in the
> Dominican Republic. "The river took everything, even the
> dead in the cemetery."
>
> Burials have been rough and rapid, and many hundreds of
> people remained missing three days after the spring rains
> made the rivers run wild. An accurate assessment of the
> death and damage may take days.
>
> Government officials in both nations said the confirmed
> death toll from the devastating floods reached nearly 900
> on Thursday. But they said it might go as high as 2,000,
> with the greatest losses in Haiti, making it one of the
> worst natural disasters in Caribbean history.
>
> The death counts remain estimates from officials citing
> conflicting and sometimes second-hand information. They
> stood as high as 1,660 or more in Haiti, according to some
> government officials, and were confirmed at more than 300
> in the Dominican Republic.
>
> A total of at least 11,200 families, probably more, have
> been displaced by the flood in both nations, Red Cross
> workers here said. Thousands of homes and shanties have
> been destroyed in villages so poor and isolated that no one
> is exactly sure how many people lived there before the
> flood.
>
> Two weeks of heavy rains, which continued Thursday, became
> a deadly torrent at dawn on Monday. In Haiti, as much as
> five feet fell in 36 hours on the town of Fond Verrettes,
> in a valley about 40 miles east of the capital,
> Port-au-Prince, officials said.
>
> The rains washed away villages and hamlets clinging to the
> deforested hills along the border separating the two
> nations, which share the island of Hispaniola in the
> Caribbean.
>
> The death toll was so high, in part, because almost all the
> trees on those hills are gone, and the soil is eroded,
> leaving no natural barrier for the annual spring rains. The
> trees have been cut for charcoal, the only product with
> much market value in Haiti, the Western Hemisphere's
> poorest nation.
>
> The two hardest-hit areas in Haiti are in and around Fond
> Verrettes, where hundreds are dead and missing, and in and
> around Mapou, to the southeast, where at least 280 people
> are dead and as many as 1,000 are feared to have died,
> according to conflicting accounts given by Haitian
> officials.
>
> International aid workers are still trying to reach towns
> and villages in Haiti's southeast, including Bodarie,
> Thiotte and Grand Gosier. Margareth Martin, the Haitian
> government's representative for the southeast region,
> placed the death toll in the Mapou area at 1,000 and said
> that rescue efforts were nearly impossible there because
> the roads were impassable.
>
> Prime Minister Gérard Latortue planned to leave Haiti on
> Thursday for a summit meeting of Latin American and
> European Union nations in Guadalajara, Mexico, after
> blaming deforestation for the magnitude of the disaster and
> promising to create a forest protection unit made up of
> former soldiers of the demobilized Haitian Army.
>
> Just across the border in the Dominican Republic, more than
> 300 people are dead and 375 still missing in and around the
> town of Jimaní, where the river burst its banks at dawn
> Monday, washed away hundreds of homes, killed cattle,
> destroyed crops and displaced more than 1,000 families,
> according to Dominican and Red Cross officials.
>
> Jimaní residents and local authorities said the death toll
> might be higher, fearing that many people were buried under
> the mud or had been washed down to Lago Enriquillo, a lake
> about 19 miles to the southeast.
>
> Jimaní was a town of about 15,000. Now its diminished
> population is seeking those who were lost, along with food,
> drinking water and clothing.
>
> What was the La Cuarenta neighborhood, its poorest area, is
> now mud, rocks, branches and debris. Largely inhabited by
> Haitians, it had been built in a riverbed that had been dry
> for years.
>
> La Cuarenta had several hundred small houses. All have been
> washed away. Those who lived there are dead or missing.
>
> "The river took my daughter and two granddaughters," said
> Altagracia Recio, 54. "I lost everything."
>
> The Dominican Republic's president, Hipólito Mejía, flew to
> Jimaní on Thursday for the first time since the disaster.
> So did the United States ambassador, Hans H. Hertell, who
> said, "This situation is grim, and we're looking at ways to
> get more money here."
>
> Promised aid to the victims includes $50,000 from the
> United States, $42,000 from Canada, $100,000 from Japan and
> $2.43 million from the European Union.
>
> Family and local private aid has been faster than
> international relief. Trucks and buses have been traveling
> to Jimaní since Tuesday with contributions from schools,
> businesses and individuals.
>
> Jimaní was filled with "Haitians who had fled their
> country, many trying to make a living in a black market,
> selling second-hand clothes," said Cristina Estrada, a
> representative of the International Federation of Red Cross
> and Red Crescent Societies.
>
> The Dominican Republic is poor, with a per capita income of
> about $2,000 a year, but Haiti is far poorer. Its annual
> per capita income is roughly $400.
>
> And the floods in Haiti come at a difficult time, after an
> uprising that left more than 200 people dead and helped
> oust President Jean-Bertrand Aristide this winter. A
> government cobbled together with the help of the United
> States remains nearly bankrupt, without many functioning
> agencies.
>
> Among those trying to aid the living are members of the
> American-led multinational military force that occupied
> Haiti after Mr. Aristide fled three months ago under
> pressure from rebels and the United States government.
>
> Lt. Col. David Lapan, a spokesman for the multinational
> force, said United States marines had been flying
> helicopters to Fond Verrettes and Mapou, in the
> southeastern region of Haiti, for several days, ferrying
> drinking water, food and plastic sheeting to shelter
> thousands of people left homeless by the flooding.
>
> Mapou, he and others reported, is gone. The town lay in a
> valley now under as much as 10 feet of water rimmed by mud
> and rubble.
>
> "In Fond Verrettes, they used what little flat land they
> had in the middle of this valley, which is what was
> flooded," Colonel Lapan said. "A flash flood rolled through
> the area, took what had been a dry streambed and expanded
> it by a few hundred meters and took everything in its path,
> and either swept it downstream or buried it right there."
>
> The forecast called for more rain Friday, which could
> hamper efforts to deliver relief supplies. Using about half
> a dozen Marine helicopters, the interim force delivered
> about 18,000 liters of water and 500 boxes of fruit and
> bread, but flights may have to halt because of downpours,
> Colonel Lapan said.
>
> The roads between Port-au-Prince and the worst-off towns
> remained impassable, making helicopters the only way to
> transport food, water and shelter.
>
> Officials at the United Nations World Food Program in Haiti
> said they were struggling to get enough food for an
> estimated 15,000 people who had to flee their homes.
>
> "We are trying to react as quickly as possible," said Iñigo
> Álvarez-Miranda, a spokesman for the food program in
> Port-au-Prince. "Even before this we were already operating
> in a country in a deep crisis."
>
> The program feeds 500,000 of Haiti's 8 million people. The
> country's man-made misery has grown since the revolt that
> toppled Mr. Aristide, Mr. Álvarez said, and now this new
> natural disaster has deepened Haiti's despair.
>
> Tim Weiner reported from Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic,
> for this article, and Lydia Polgreen from New York.
> Jean-Michel Caroit contributed reporting from the Dominican
> Republic.
>
> http://www.nytimes.com/2004/05/28/international/americas/28CARI.html?
> ex=1086755612&ei=1&en=bfc7dbdba1fb5ac8
*********
Forwarded by the Haitian Lawyers Leadership
******
******
"Men anpil chaj pa lou" is Kreyol for - "Many hands make light a heavy load."
See, The Haitian Leadership Networks' 7 "men anpil chaj pa
lou" campaigns to help restore Haiti's independence, the will of the mass
electorate and the rule of law. See,
http://www.margueritelaurent.com/pressclips/haitianlawyers.html ; http://www.margueritelaurent.com/campaigns/campaigns.html
and Haitiaction.net
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