Troops Rush to Flood-Wracked Caribbean

Horrid floods, 1000 feared dead.


FOND VERRETTES, Haiti (AP) - U.S. and Canadian troops on Thursday rushed to a town left completely submerged by flooding, and health officials feared 1,000 people could be dead in that town alone, a figure that would nearly double the toll from storms that hit Haiti and the Dominican Republic.

About 300 bodies have been counted so far in the isolated border town of Mapou, said Dr. Yvon Lavissiere, the health director for the region.

That brought the confirmed death toll from Haiti and the Dominican Republic to nearly 870.

“In Mapou, the situation is serious because the entire town is submerged in water,” said U.S. Marine Lt. Col. Dave Lapan, a spokesman for the U.S.-led multinational task force in Haiti. “We’re also fighting time because weather is turning bad again.”

U.S. and Canadian troops, sent to Haiti after rebels ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide on Feb. 29, were ferrying water and supplies to Mapou, 30 miles southeast of the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince.

As many as 1,000 people were feared dead in Mapou, said Margarette Martin, the government’s representative for the southeast region in nearby Jacmel.

In the Haitian border town of Fond Verrettes, meanwhile, more troops handed out food Thursday to hundreds of survivors who lined up seeking help. Troops were also ferrying plastic tarpaulins to families seeking shelter.

Rains over the weekend lashed the island of Hispaniola, which Haiti shares with the Dominican Republic, sweeping away entire neighborhoods early Monday.

Including the 300 known dead so far in Mapou, some 450 bodies have been recovered in Haiti. At least 158 more people in Fond Verrettes were missing and presumed dead.

At least 417 bodies had been recovered in the Dominican Republic, and officials said some 400 were missing.

“The river took everything, there isn’t anything left,” said Jermanie Vulsont, a mother who said the rushing water swept away her five children in Fond Verrettes, about 35 miles southeast of Port-au-Prince.

Rushing waters and mudslides swept away most homes in Fond Verrettes, leaving it looking like a barren riverbed with stunned residents wondering about and asking troops for help.

“For a while we didn’t even realize what we were standing on,” said Lance Cpl. Justin Collins, 21, of Avon, Ill., one of about 20 U.S. Marines who went to help feed villagers. “We were standing on some parts of a neighborhood. It’s clear they need more food and water.”

Among the known dead in Haiti were 100 bodies found in the southern town of Grand Gosier, said Civil Protection Director Marie Alta Jean-Baptiste. Fifty more corpses were found elsewhere.

In the Dominican Republic, U.S. Ambassador Hans Hertell flew to the border town of Jimani early Thursday to assess the damage. “This situation is grim and we’re looking at ways to get more money here,” he said.

The floods struck before dawn Monday while people were sleeping. In Jimani, Leonardo Novas awoke to the screams of his infant son while water rose in his wooden house. He huddled with his wife and three children, and shouted to his brother next door to stay inside, but it was too late.

The force of the mud took all but one wall of Novas’ house.

“Everything’s gone. My house and five family members,” said Novas, 28, who watched his brother and the brother’s family carried away in a crushing torrent of mud.

Dominican authorities buried more than 250 bodies immediately, some where they were found and others in a mass grave. Authorities told families there was no time to identify many of the bodies because they were badly decomposed and posed health risks if moved.

Jimani, about 100 miles east of the Dominican capital of Santo Domingo, is inhabited mostly by Haitian migrants who work as vendors and sugar cane cutters. Dominican officials said some of the Haitians who lost relatives may have been living in the town illegally and were scared to identify bodies.

The death tolls have been high because the border area is largely deforested and many of the poor have built poorly constructed homes out of wood and tin. Hundreds of homes were destroyed on both sides of the border.

The floods were some of the deadliest in the region in recent years. In 1994, Tropical Storm Gordon caused mudslides that buried at least 829 Haitians. As many as 15,000 people are estimated to have died in 1999 flooding and mudslides in Venezuela.

The Dominican government declared Jimani a disaster area, and President Hipolito Mejia said Thursday would be a national day of mourning.

“The damage and human losses have been of such magnitude,” Mejia said in his declaration, adding that sending aid is of “high national interest.”

http://apnews.myway.com/article/20040527/D82R4RPO1.html

sad..but good to see troops are there to help people out. have they had major floods in those areas before?

Lots of lives lost. :(

yes, how much of that is due to bad planning, construction and sotrm water mgmt.

I know when natrural disasters occur, people get affected, u cant insulate yourself 100% but in developing countries the issues are compunded due to these issues.

anyone know?

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by Fraudz: *
yes, how much of that is due to bad planning, construction and sotrm water mgmt.

I know when natrural disasters occur, people get affected, u cant insulate yourself 100% but in developing countries the issues are compunded due to these issues.

anyone know?
[/QUOTE]

Not just in developing countries - many European nations suffer unduely (eg. Spain, France, Italy) because of deforestation, narrowing of natural waterways etc. so that flows from heavy rains cause mud slides because there are few trees to bind the soil together and the narrow channels mean the water flows much faster, with all the relative consequences.

Please allow Americans to hold a smidgeon of pride.

These troops in Haiti are there to help. God Bless them.

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by Awam ki Awaz: *

Not just in developing countries - many European nations suffer unduely (eg. Spain, France, Italy) because of deforestation, narrowing of natural waterways etc. so that flows from heavy rains cause mud slides because there are few trees to bind the soil together and the narrow channels mean the water flows much faster, with all the relative consequences.
[/QUOTE]

thats true, but the extend of destruction is less severe due to better infratsructure, building codes, better handling of storm water mgmt

replay to av girl

nah,you have it all wrong.It's the Americans fault.

Floods,the ignorant and violence of the third world,Americas fault.
Anti-Semitism,Americas fault.
Paved streetd,indoor plumbing,vaccinations,etc.Americas fault.
God,I wish we would just bring allo four troops home and leave all of you to kill one another.Now that would be progress.

3100+ dead. Role of the dice my friends.

Fraudia, don't ask dumb questions, the answer is money and education..90% of the time. But seriously the little I’ve read indicates that the growth of villages increases deforestation (the little forest they have) which in turn causes more runoff thus floods, true or untrue I don’t know and apparently we have no one with first base knowledge or the time/effort to research it, where is Nadia?

Finally why is this listed important, let’s be honest.