Compared
to saturation coverage of Irma and Harvey it is very difficult to
find much coverage about Dominica from international media.
Dominica
devastation emerges with fatalities and ‘90% of buildings
destroyed’
19
September, 2017
One
fatality is said to have occurred in Morne Prosper, and the other
five in Dos Dane, a village close to Portsmouth.
Until
the last 30 minutes there was no
communication with anyone on the island since 4am local time.
WIC
News understands
90% or more of the island’s buildings have been destroyed. When
contact was lost, initial reports were that 70% had been damaged.
As
well as buildings, trees have been uprooted and power lines have been
ripped to the ground. It is understood that landslides have blocked a
number of roads across the country.
Bath
Estate and Coulibistrie has seen severe flooding, but the full
picture across Dominica is slowly being revealed.
Sources
in Mahaut have said that homes have lost their roofs – reflecting
the state across the island – but there are no confirmed
casualties.
Ross
University School of Medicine, located in the Portsmouth area, has
not reported any casualties – although, as with the rest of the
nation, contact has been broken.
WIC
News has
been told that a helicopter from Martinique will visit Dominica
tomorrow to survey the damage. It is expected that Prime Minister
Roosevelt Skerrit and disaster management experts will be on the
flight.
All
communication towers are down, and are expected to be out of action
for some time.
Information
has trickled out of the island this afternoon via ham radio
operators, who are the only people in contact with each other and the
outside world.
For
this reason there has not yet been an official government response to
the disaster.
United Caribbean response
The
region is mobilising to assist Dominica, with St Lucia to act as the
main point of rescue due to Dominica’s airport being rendered
unusable.
The
government of Trinidad and Tobago has dispatched two emergency
helicopters and crews to assist the government with search and
rescue.
They
have also sent a medical ship with supplies and food.
Speaking
this evening, Prime Minister of Antigua and Barbuda Gaston Browne
said: “The government and people of Antigua and Barbuda stand in
solidarity with the government and people of the Commonwealth of
Dominica during this time of need.”
Dominica’s
prime minister experienced the destructive power of Hurricane Maria
during the night.
Skerrit
posted live updates of the hurricane’s progress, writing on
Facebook soon after Maria’s landfall that his home had suffered
damage: “My roof is gone. I am at the complete mercy of the
hurricane. House is flooding.”
After
being rescued, Skerrit wrote: “My greatest fear for the morning is
that we will wake to news of serious physical injury and possible
deaths as a result of likely landslides triggered by persistent
rains.”
Heartbreaking statement from Roosevelt Skerrit, Prime Minister of Dominica:
"We will need help, my friend, we will need help of all kinds."
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