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Haiti tropical storm toll soars

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Time Zone: EST (New York, Toronto)
Messenger: Eleazar1234 Sent: 9/7/2008 11:08:41 PM
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News Americas
Haiti tropical storm toll soars

Flooding has hampered aid workers from reaching many of the storm's survivors [AFP]

Nearly 500 people have died in the Haitian port city of Gonaives due to flooding caused by tropical storm Hanna, police have said, warning that more bodies could still be found.

Police in Gonaives found 495 corpses after muddy floodwaters began to recede on Friday, following days of heavy rain.

"The weather is calm now and we are discovering more bodies. We have found 495 bodies so far and there are 13 people missing," Ernst Dorfeuille, Gonaives commissioner, said.

"The smell of the dead is very unpleasant in Gonaives. The death toll could be even higher."

Aid is beginning to reach storm survivors, but thousands of people remain stranded after roads flooded and bridges collapsed.

Aid arrives

A ship carrying about 33 tons of food, water and other relief supplies docked in Gonaives and UN peacekeepers are distributing the aid to those in need.

"The objective is to get this [aid] as soon as possible to the population, who have gone without food or water for about five days," Teresa Bo, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Port-au-Prince, Haiti's capital, said.

Earlier on Friday, Haiti's civil protection office said that at least 136 people had died as a result of the storm, mainly in Gonaives.

Large areas of Gonaives are still under water and up to 70 per cent of its 300,000 residents have been without water or food since the storm hit on Monday, she said.

About 10,000 of the city's residents have been driven into shelters because of the flooding, Alta Jean-Baptiste said.

Other areas of Haiti affected by the storm remain inaccessible by road, hampering relief efforts.

An emergency official said: "Several southern towns have also been flooded and access is impossible because the roads were cut off and the bridges collapsed,"

Food scarce

Many people are scouring the streets in an effort to find food, Bo reported.

"Most of the roads are completely blocked and the weather has not been helping in order to deliver aid by air, so the situation is very complicated on the ground," she reported.

In Video

Fears for survivors in the wake of tropical storm

The UN is in the process of launching an international appeal after Haiti requested international assistance, a spokesperson for the Office for the
Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), said.

The European Commission on Friday has also launched its own aid action for Haiti.

"The European Commission has today launched a fast-track funding decision for two million euros ($2.9m) to provide relief for victims of Tropical Storm Hanna in Haiti," the EU's said in a statement.

Daniel Rouzier, the Haiti chairman of Food for the Poor, said that the situation in the country is "catastrophic".

"We, just like the rest of the victims ... have limited mobility. You can't float a boat, drive a truck or fly anything to the victims," he said.

Convoys hampered

Areas of northern Haiti are without power due to landslides and flooding after Hanna rained heavily over the mountainous region for four days.

Government and UN convoys attempting to deliver food have been "attacked by famished people," an official said.

Myrta Kaulard, a UN food agency representative, said: "All roads able to access Gonaives are cut either by bridges that have collapsed, by trees that have fallen down, or by waters that have washed away parts of the streets."

Storm expected

Helicopters from the UN peacekeeping mission in Haiti have rescued survivors from rooftops in Gonaives.

Large areas of the city of Gonaives are under water after the storm [AFP]
UN officials say they are also seeking ways for the helicopters to deliver food, water and water purification tablets.

"I don't know how much longer we will remain alive," Germain Michelet, a priest who took refuge from the flooding on the second floor of the archbishop's office, said.

"If we are forced to go through another night under these conditions, there will not be many survivors."

A category four storm, Ike, is also set to shave northern Hispaniola – the island shared by Haiti and the Dominican Republic – on Saturday.

"What we do know is that most of the residents, especially of Gonaives, are leaving," Bo said.

"It is not clear yet whether they are being evacuated, but humanitarian organisations are trying to get people out of there.

The disaster comes days after hurricane Gustav and tropical storm Fay swept Haiti, killing 117 people across the country.



Messenger: Eleazar1234 Sent: 9/7/2008 11:09:25 PM
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Hurricane Ike sparks panic in Haiti
Aid workers have delivered high-energy biscuits and water to storm victims [EPA]

Hundreds of people in Haiti have fled the waterlogged city of Gonaives for higher ground as a new storm, Hurricane Ike, threatened to compound a disaster caused by a previous storm.

Hurricane Ike strengthened to an "extremely dangerous" category four storm in the Atlantic on Saturday, according to the US National Hurricane Centre (NHC).

Storm warnings were issued for Gonaives and other parts of Haiti ahead of the storm.

Some residents climbed on top of cars to reach the second floor of their homes, where they had piled up furniture and spread sheets to provide shade, said Holly Inurreta of Catholic Relief Services.

"We are very concerned about Ike," she said. "Any bit more of rain and Gonaives will be cut off again."

But the NHC said Ike was expected to spare Haiti a direct hit.

"But they will still get pretty strong winds and rain [in Haiti] ... as well as the Dominican Republic," warned Cristina Carrasco, an NHC forecaster.

Haiti is still battling with flooding from recent Tropical Storm Hanna, which left hundreds of people dead and hundreds of thousands of people displaced.

Teresa Bo, Al Jazeera's correspondent in the Haitian city of Gonaives, which has been submerged in water, said: "This storm has already worsened what already was a critical situation ... and there could be mudslides."

Locals are "blaming the government and the United Nations because they have not eaten anything for days," she said.

Bo said further rain is making rescue operations even more difficult.

Ike threatens Cuba

Haiti storm




Hurricane Ike threatens to disrupt relief effort
With winds near 215kph, Ike was expected to move into Cuba on Sunday or Monday, the NHC said in an advisory.

"Ike is now an extremely dangerous category four hurricane on the [one to five] Saffir-Simpson scale," the NHC said.

Ike also has the potential to strike the southern Florida Keys as it heads into the Gulf of Mexico, threatening Louisiana and the rest of the US Gulf Coast which last week weathered Hurricane Gustav.

In Gonaives, UN peacekeepers and aid workers delivered high-energy biscuits and water to storm survivors, many of whom had not eaten since Monday.

"What I saw in this city today is close to hell on earth," Hedi Annabi, a UN envoy, said.

Everton Fox, Al Jazeera's meteorologist said: "Ike is making its way away from The Turks and Caicos islands pretty quickly.

"It is moving at about 25km per hour and will steadily head towards Cuba in a direct hit."

Fox said the storm will hit Cuba "strongly" but is then expected to "low down significantly and become a category one hurricane by the time it leaves the country.

Due to a huge amount of rainfall in Cuba "there will be landslides, flash flooding and widespread devastation," he predicted.

'Hell on earth'

Dozens of children raised their hands and ran after UN food trucks that rumbled through the damp streets of Gonaives. "Hungry! Hungry!" they yelled.

Food also was brought to hungry inmates at the local jail.

The water in many neighborhoods has receded from about three metres high to about knee deep, but at least 40,000 people remain in emergency shelters.

However, the death toll in Gonaives has been reduced after Ernst Dorfeuille, the police commissioner for the city, told The Associated Press that a news report the previous evening that quoted him as saying 495 bodies had been found in Gonaives following Tropical Storm Hanna was completely wrong.

He said there were 32 confirmed deaths in this city on Haiti's west coast from the storm that hit on Monday.



Messenger: Eleazar1234 Sent: 9/7/2008 11:11:24 PM
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evastating Hurricane Ike has hit the northern coast of Cuba, where mass evacuations have taken place.

Hundreds of thousands of people have been moved from low-lying areas to shelter from the powerful storm.

The storm has already left at least 47 people dead in Haiti and is reported to have wiped out 80% of homes on the main Turks and Caicos islands.

Winds of more than 120mph (195km/h) are hammering the region and torrential rains have caused serious flooding.

Ike has weakened to a Category Three but is still said to be dangerous.

The Cuban Meteorology Institute said the eye of the hurricane came ashore near Punta Lucrecia in the state of Holguin about 510 miles (823km) south-east of Havana.


RED CROSS APPEAL
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The BBC's Emilio San Pedro says the Cuban authorities have always proven to be extremely effective at dealing with these types of emergencies - mobilising medical units, opening emergency shelters and evacuating people as they have been doing ahead of Ike's arrival.

Among those taken to safety were 15,000 tourists.

But Ike comes as the relief effort continues in the wake of Hurricane Gustav - which caused serious devastation just days ago on the western side of the island.
See Ike's predicted path

Of critical concern is whether the capital, Havana, Cuba's most populous city, with its precarious colonial buildings, will take a direct hit from the storm. If that were to happen it could prove devastating, our correspondent says.

Haiti, the poorest country in the Western hemisphere, has already endured the onslaught of four tropical storms in a three week period.

Local media says the heavy rains and flooding sparked by the outer bands of the storm killed at least 47 people, many of them children, in the town of Cabaret, north of the capital, Port au Prince.

The destruction in Haiti has been described as catastrophic. Police said 500 people were confirmed dead from recent Tropical Storm Hanna but that others are still missing and the number could rise.

Florida threat


RECENT MAJOR STORMS
Hurricane Ike: September
Tropical Storm Hanna: September
Hurricane Gustav: August, September
Tropical Storm Fay: August

In pictures: Hurricane Ike
Eyewitness: Waiting for Ike
Guide: How hurricanes form

The US National Hurricane Center says it is moving westwards at 13mph (20km/h) and is expected to make a 30-hour track along the centre of the island, although weakening as it does so.

It has weakened slightly, from Category Four to Three, but the NHC said it was still potentially very dangerous.

On its current track the storm could threaten the islands of the Florida Keys by Tuesday. Some residents have received evacuation orders.

Emergency management director Craig Fugate, urged them to move soon, or they "may find the escape route blocked by a hurricane".


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