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Toll in Haiti floods rises to 11 February 27th
14:32hrs http://news.yahoo.com/s/a...0228003521 PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AFP) – The death toll from flooding in quake-hit Haiti Saturday rose to at least 11, according to an AFP compilation of fatalities counted by officials and a journalist in the region. "The situation is grave... Whole areas are completely flooded. People have climbed on to the roofs of their homes," a local senator, Francky Exius, told AFP by telephone. Five people died in the southwestern district of Gelee, near Haiti's third-biggest city of Les Cayes, when their vehicle was tossed over in rising waters on a road, he said. Another three died in the nearby village of Torbeck, a deputy, Guy Gerard Georges, said. The deaths added to three other fatalities elsewhere in the region already recorded by Haiti's civil emergencies service and a local journalist. (additional headlines) 'Grave' flooding in quake-hit Haiti kills 11: 27 February 2010 1633hrs http://news.yahoo.com/s/a...0228003521 by Clarens Renois Clarens Renois – 57 mins ago PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AFP) – Flooding triggered by heavy rain killed at least 11 people in Les Cayes, Haiti's third most populous city and an area unscathed by the devastating January 12 earthquake that flattened much of the country's capital. Heavy rains washed more than 1.5 meters (60 inches) of water into Les Cayes, flooding the city's hospital and prison, Haiti's civil emergencies service said. Witnesses said homes collapsed and people were fleeing for safer areas. "The situation is grave.... Whole areas are completely flooded. People have climbed on to the roofs of their homes," a local senator, Francky Exius, told AFP by telephone. UN peacekeepers and Haitian police evacuated 500 inmates from the local prison, officials said, while hospital staff moved patients to the safety of higher floors. Exius said five people were killed in Les Cayes's Gelee district when rising waters flipped their vehicles. Another three were killed in the nearby village of Torbeck, where the water "has carried away portions of the asphalt of the road," a parliamentary deputy, Guy Gerard Georges, told AFP. The deaths added to one other fatality in the town of Baraderes recorded by the emergencies service, and two others in the region relayed by a local journalist also contacted by AFP. "Several towns and villages in southern Haiti are flooded," a spokesman for the civil emergency unit said. "Continuous rain has forced people to abandon their homes." The coastal city of Les Cayes, on a peninsula 160 kilometers (100 miles) west of Port-au-Prince, has an estimated permanent population of 70,000. That number has swollen as survivors of the January 12 earthquake that leveled 70 percent of Port-au-Prince fled to untouched Haitian cities and towns. The heavy rains were a portent of what Port-au-Prince could face within weeks, when the Caribbean's wet season will wash over the exposed capital and its huddled residents. [Edited 2/27/10 17:40pm] Live life as though each moment is as precious & beautiful as a rainbow after a spring rain. b positive, creative, kind, productive, resourceful & respectful of humankind, & feel free 2 know that U-R-A . i can feel it when u shine on me | |
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Haiti’s Futile Race Against the Rain
By LAWRENCE DOWNES Published: February 28, 2010 http://www.nytimes.com/20...1mon4.html There were floods on Saturday in Les Cayes, in southwestern Haiti. It rained in Port-au-Prince on Thursday, and again on Saturday and Sunday night, long enough to slick the streets and make a slurry of the dirt and concrete dust. Long enough, too, to give a sense of what will happen across the country in a few weeks, when the real storms start. Mud will wash down the mountains, and rain will overflow gutters choked with rubble and waste, turning streets into filthy rivers. Life will get even more difficult for more than a million people. New misery and sickness will drench the displaced survivors of the Jan. 12 earthquake — like the 16,000 or so whose tents and flimsy shacks fill every available inch of the Champ de Mars, the plaza in Port-au-Prince by the cracked and crumbled National Palace, or the 70,000 who have made a city of the Petionville Club, a nine-hole golf course on a mountainside above the capital. The rainy season is the hard deadline against which Haiti’s government and relief agencies in Port-au-Prince are racing as they try to solve a paralyzing riddle: how to shelter more than a million displaced people in a densely crowded country that has no good place to put them. The plan after the quake was to move people to camps outside the city. But in a sudden shift last week, officials unveiled a new idea. They would try to send as many people as possible, tens of thousands, back to the shattered streets of Port-au-Prince before the rains come. The prime minister approved it on Friday. If it sounds insane, insanity is relative in Haiti now. Consider the choices: Let people stay in filthy, fragile settlements where no one wants to live, and pray when the hurricanes hit. Build sturdy transitional housing in places like Jérémie, in the southwest, that can absorb the capital’s overflow. Encourage people to return to neighborhoods that are clogged with rubble and will be for years, where the smell of death persists. In areas like Bel Air and Fort National, near Champ de Mars, people whose homes still stand are sleeping outside, in fear of aftershocks. They were still pulling bodies out of Fort National over the weekend, burning them on the spot. The first plan is intolerable. The second may come true only several years and hurricanes from now. The third is merely absurd. Officials believe that if they clear just enough rubble from certain areas of the city and improve drainage in flood-prone areas, they can ease the pressure on the camps and save lives. It makes some sense to keep people near their neighborhoods, holding on to what remains of their lives and livelihoods. But when what remains is nothing, it’s hard to make sense of that idea. Harder still when you realize that the Haitian government and aid agencies are still overwhelmed by the crisis. The government hasn’t even figured out where to put the rubble, and doesn’t seem to know who is living where. Official word was that 80 percent of refugees in Champ de Mars were from Turgeau, where debris-clearing is to begin. I talked with about 40 people throughout the Champ de Mars. They were from Bel Air, Fort National, St. Martin. Nobody was from Turgeau. Several knew of the plan and a few had registered for it. But nobody had been told where, when and how they would leave. Pascal Benjamin, a 29-year-old huddled with family on the edge of the Champ de Mars, is from Bel Air. “I heard they were going to find a place, but they never came to talk to us.” I spoke with Selondieu Marcelus, his brother, Sony, and nephew, Ricardo. They were standing beside a yellow tent marked with sardonic graffiti. “Donnons le pays aux Français,” it said. “Let’s give the country to the French.” Mr. Marcelus once lived on Rue Macajoux in Bel Air. He lost his wife there. He didn’t know where he would end up. As long as the place has work, jobs, electricity, I don’t mind, he said. He was unusual. Most of those I met, in Champ de Mars and in the vast blue-and-orange tarpscape blanketing the Petionville Club, said they dearly wanted to go home. It seems certain that this plan for Haiti’s displaced is going to be ineffective, and that people will suffer and die for lack of anything better. The only rational plan for Haiti is to disperse the population of a city that filled to bursting years ago. Making it easier for people to shoehorn back into Port-au-Prince, looking for jobs and space that don’t exist, is ludicrous. It’s a sign of the scale and perplexing nature of this disaster — and the fix faced by the government that is too slowly confronting it — that the ludicrous option is the only one available.[b] Live life as though each moment is as precious & beautiful as a rainbow after a spring rain. b positive, creative, kind, productive, resourceful & respectful of humankind, & feel free 2 know that U-R-A . i can feel it when u shine on me | |
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I pray everyday for grief-stricken people in Haiti and their families here. LOVE HARD. | |
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wow! | |
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