As we wait for Sandy to hit the United States we should not (like most of the media) forget the countries of the Caribbean that have fewer resources to cope with the devastation.
Hurricane
Sandy's Death Toll Reaches 69 in Caribbean Countries
29
October, 2012
As
Hurricane Sandy barrels towards the East Coast on Monday afternoon,
the storm has left death and destruction in its wake, killing at
least 69 people thus far. Caribbean countries, including Cuba and
Haiti, felt the worst of it last week and over the weekend.
On
Wednesday, the hurricane moved across Jamaica as a Category 1 storm,
leaving downed power lines and trees across the island nation. One
man was killed by a boulder that crushed his house due to strong
winds,the
Associated Press reports.
On
Thursday, Sandy touched down in Cuba, killing 11 people in Santiago
and Guantanamo provinces and increasing to a Category 2 hurricane.
Authorities called it the island's deadliest storm since Hurricane
Dennis in 2005, which killed 16 and caused $2.4 billion in damage,
the Associated
Press reported.
More than 3,000 buildings were damaged by Sandy's wind and rain,
according to Cuban state media reports.
A
man walks along a street where electrical lines hang damaged by
Hurricane Sandy in Santiago de Cuba, Cuba, Friday Oct. 26, 2012. (AP
Photo/Franklin Reyes)
Most
of Santiago, Cuba lost electricity, and very few had access to
telephones, CNN
reported.
Flooding may also pose serious health risk in region. Over the
summer, flooded wells lead to a cholera outbreak in the Granma
province of the country.
The
storm hit also hit the Bahamas, Puerto Rico, and the Dominican
Republic. In the Bahamas, two were killed, including a British
investment banker who died while he fell from his roof as he tried to
repair a window shutter.
Flooding
in Nassau, Bahamas. (Twitter/SheniqueMiller)
In
Puerto Rico, one man in his fifties was swept away in a river flooded
by Sandy's rain and ore than 100 families were also forced to
evacuate. And in the Dominican Republic, rains and wind, damaged
nearly 3,500 homes, the AP reported. More than 18,000 people were
evacuated by the government.
In
the Dominican Republic, two young men drowned while trying to cross
rivers in seperate incidents, according
to the AP.
The
worst of Sandy's damage thus far has been seen in Haiti, where 52 are
reported dead from heavy flooding and strong winds, which lasted from
Wednesday through Friday. Most of the deaths occurred in southern
Haiti and in Port-au-Prince, both areas where many Haitians live in
flimsy shelters, as a result of the 2010 earthquake, the
AP reports.
Many
homes remain underwater in southern Haiti.(AP Photo/Dieu Nalio
Chery)
Carmene
Chales, left, walks with Anes Michaelange and one-year-old Alexandra
Alexandre through an area where Hurricane Sandy triggered flooding in
Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Saturday, Oct. 27, 2012. (AP Photo/Dieu Nalio
Chery)
Fields
of banana crops were destroyed, many Haitians remain without homes,
and the death still could still rise, Haitian authorities tell the
AP.
"This
is a disaster of major proportions," Prime Minister Laurent
Lamothe said. "The whole south is under water."
Democracy Now! seems to still be operational
Democracy Now! seems to still be operational
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