OFFICIAL:
PREPARE FOR
HUGE DEATH TOLL IN
BAHAMAS - Dead bodies in
the streets, in the churches,
everywhere . . .
https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-storm-dorian-evacuees/hundreds-of-weary-hopeful-bahamas-evacuees-arrive-in-florida-by-ship-idUKKCN1VS0P8?fbclid=IwAR2Y3a3tdshRY6z9l2S8M-qDYNmC2_GM1mKP3an8TbILxiZk6ORPrXfoBAU
HUGE DEATH TOLL IN
BAHAMAS - Dead bodies in
the streets, in the churches,
everywhere . . .
6
September, 2019
The
Bahamas death toll from Hurricane Dorian is likely to soar, the
health minister warns. “The public need to prepare for
unimaginable information about the death toll and the human
suffering," Dr. Duane Sands said.
“It’s
going to be huge," Bahamas health minister Dr. Duane Sands said
of the death toll after Hurricane Dorian.
“We have four morticians in Abaco embalming because we have run out of coolers. (to store dead bodies)”
“We have four morticians in Abaco embalming because we have run out of coolers. (to store dead bodies)”
“Literally
hundreds, up to thousands of people are still missing," said Joy
Jibrilu, director general of the Bahamas' Ministry of Tourism.
Adrian
Farrington, a 38-year-old Abaco father, watched a powerful storm
surge swallow his young son.
While sitting on a gurney in a room at Princess Margaret Hospital (PMH) in Nassau yesterday, Farrington, a resident of Murphy Town, told The Nassau Guardian, “My leg was numb, but I was still trying to stay afloat with my son. After about an hour of treading water and bleeding, I noticed…some fins swimming along the houses.
“So, I grabbed my son and I put him on top the roof. The water was high on the roof.”
Farrington said his son, Adrian Farrington Jr., 5, kept crying.
“I keep telling him, ‘Don’t cry. Close your month. Don’t cry. Keep breathing. Don’t cry. Close your mouth,’” he said.
Farrington said the water was “so high I could’ve taken my elbow and I could’ve put it on the roof to get up on the roof”.
“But before I could sit on the roof to hold him, the gust from the hurricane dragged him across the roof back into the surge on the next side,” he said.
Farrington added, “I still could remember him reaching for me and calling me, ‘Daddy.’”
He said he pushed debris aside and rushed to get to the other side where his son had fallen.
However, Farrington said he could not see anything when he went underwater.
“I was like feeling to see if I could feel some kind of cloth, some kind of clothes, some kind of skin, flesh, tennis, something,” he said while fighting back tears.
While sitting on a gurney in a room at Princess Margaret Hospital (PMH) in Nassau yesterday, Farrington, a resident of Murphy Town, told The Nassau Guardian, “My leg was numb, but I was still trying to stay afloat with my son. After about an hour of treading water and bleeding, I noticed…some fins swimming along the houses.
“So, I grabbed my son and I put him on top the roof. The water was high on the roof.”
Farrington said his son, Adrian Farrington Jr., 5, kept crying.
“I keep telling him, ‘Don’t cry. Close your month. Don’t cry. Keep breathing. Don’t cry. Close your mouth,’” he said.
Farrington said the water was “so high I could’ve taken my elbow and I could’ve put it on the roof to get up on the roof”.
“But before I could sit on the roof to hold him, the gust from the hurricane dragged him across the roof back into the surge on the next side,” he said.
Farrington added, “I still could remember him reaching for me and calling me, ‘Daddy.’”
He said he pushed debris aside and rushed to get to the other side where his son had fallen.
However, Farrington said he could not see anything when he went underwater.
“I was like feeling to see if I could feel some kind of cloth, some kind of clothes, some kind of skin, flesh, tennis, something,” he said while fighting back tears.
One
resident of Abaco who is still there gives this report. - "Plenty
of deaths," "Unreal," "Dead bodies in the
streets, in the churches, everywhere," "People going
crazy," "Rationing of food and water."
There
are so many dead bodies, they have resorted to throwing them on
flatbed trucks, out in the open, to haul them away (as seen in photo
above.)
Living
conditions 'rapidly
deteriorating' after storm in
Bahamas - aid group
7
September, 2019
NASSAU,
Bahamas (Reuters) - Thousands of displaced people are living in
“rapidly deteriorating” conditions in the worst-hit parts of the
Bahamas six days after Hurricane Dorian made landfall, the United
Nations World Food Programme warned on Saturday.
The
warning came as aid groups rushed emergency help to the storm-ravaged
islands and officials warned a death toll of 43 was likely to spike
higher as the number of missing among the archipelago nation’s
400,000 residents becomes clear.
Even
as the aid ships and aircraft headed in, thousands fled the
devastation, some abandoning hard-hit Great Abaco Island to seek
safety in the capital, Nassau, and others heading to Florida for
shelter, supplies and perhaps jobs.
Some
90 percent of the homes, buildings and infrastructure in Marsh
Harbour, where Dorian rampaged for almost two full days as one of the
strongest Caribbean hurricanes on record, were damaged, the World
Food Programme said. It noted that thousands of people were living in
a government building, a medical centre and an Anglican church that
survived the storms, but had little to no access to water, power and
sanitary facilities.
“The
needs remain enormous,” WFP spokesman Herve Verhoosel said in an
email Saturday. “Evacuations are slowly taking place by ferry, as
hundreds of residents reportedly flee daily.”
One
of those who fled Abaco was 19-year-old Isaiah Johnson, who was
staying in a hotel in Nassau with his mother and three sisters after
the storm’s 200 mile per hour (320 kph) winds destroyed their
homes.
A
wealthy friend had paid for a two-week stay, but after that it was
unclear where they would go.
His
mother was already searching for work in the United States, Johnson
said, reckoning that jobs would be hard to find in Nassau.
“Two
weeks might be enough time for me to figure things out,” Johnson
said on Saturday. “For my mom, I’m not so sure.”
A
cruise ship with more than 1,000 evacuees arrived in south Florida on
Saturday. Some had small children or ageing relatives who they hoped
to find safe lodging for before returning to try to repair or rebuild
their island homes.
The
U.S. Coast Guard and Navy were shipping in relief supplies and had
already rescued some 290 people from isolated areas in the islands.
The U.S. Agency for International Development said it raised its
allocation of aid to the Bahamas by $1 million, to $2.8 million in
total and had moved enough emergency supplies for 44,000 people to
the islands.
Some
70,000 people were in need of food and shelter, the WFP estimated,
and private forecasters estimated that some $3 billion in insured
property was destroyed or damaged in the Caribbean.
Dorian
pounded parts of North Carolina’s Outer Banks Islands on Friday. On
Saturday, Sue Jones, a 22-year resident of the town of Frisco on the
islands, said a storm surge sent 14 to 16 inches (36 to 40 cm) of
water into the lowest level of her home, and she spent the day
cutting sheetrock from the walls and clearing out water.
By
5 p.m. ET (2100 GMT), Dorian was a still-powerful post-tropical
cyclone with 100 mile per hour (160 kph) winds, equivalent to the
wind speed of a Category 2 hurricane, the National Hurricane Center
said.
It
was located about 50 miles (80 km) south-southwest of Halifax, Nova
Scotia, at that time and due to make landfall in the next few hours,
the NHC said.
Dorian
hit the Bahamas earlier in the week with Category 5 winds, with some
gusts topping 200 miles per hour (320 kph).
LARGE
NUMBER OF DEAD FEARED
The
medical chief of staff at Princess Margaret Hospital in Nassau, Dr.
Caroline Burnett-Garraway, said two refrigerated, 40-foot trucks
would be needed to hold the “staggering” number of bodies that
were expected to be found.
The
American Red Cross said it had committed an initial $2 million to
help the Bahamas recover from the hurricane, with food, water and
shelter and other necessities.
“Our
relief operation is growing, but we are also facing serious
challenges in terms of delivering aid,” Red Cross spokeswoman
Jennifer Eli said. “Even search-and-rescue choppers haven’t been
able to reach some people because there’s no place to land.”
Near
an area called The Mudd in Marsh Harbour, a commercial hub, a Reuters
witness reported most houses levelled, the body of a man lying near a
main street and dead dogs floating in water.
The
risk of outbreaks of diarrhoea and waterborne diseases is high as
drinking water may be tainted with sewage, according to the Pan
American Health Organization.
Travis
Newton, a 32-year-old carpenter who survived the storm in Marsh
Harbour, said he arrived in Nassau on Saturday morning with his
family, trying to find a safe place to live.
He
said residents of the town foraged for food and water in the wreckage
of damaged stores after the storm passed.
“We
had to survive, we had to make it happen, we had to find food, water,
where we were aid couldn’t get to us, we had to find what we could
from the damaged stores,” Newton said. “Everybody needs to get
out of that place.”
https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-storm-dorian-evacuees/hundreds-of-weary-hopeful-bahamas-evacuees-arrive-in-florida-by-ship-idUKKCN1VS0P8?fbclid=IwAR2Y3a3tdshRY6z9l2S8M-qDYNmC2_GM1mKP3an8TbILxiZk6ORPrXfoBAU
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