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Sep 05 2008
Haiti storm aid effort hampered | Print |  E-mail
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By Agencies   

Large areas of the northern city of Gonaives are underwater after the storm [AFP]
Large areas of the northern city of Gonaives are underwater after the storm [AFP]
Rescue workers in Haiti are being hampered in their efforts to get food and drinking water to thousands of people after tropical storm Hanna left many roads flooded and bridges collapsed.

At least 136 people have died as a result of the storm, mainly in the city of Gonaives, Alta Jean-Baptiste, the head of the Haiti's civil protection office, said.

Large areas of Gonaives were still deluged by floodwater on Friday and up to 70 per cent of its 300,000 residents have been without water or food since the storm hit on Monday, she said.

About 10,000 of the city's residents have been driven into shelters because of the flooding, Jean-Baptiste said.

"Several southern towns have also been flooded and access is impossible because the roads were cut off and the bridges collapsed," another emergency official said.

Convoys hampered

Swathes of northern Haiti are without power due to landslides and flooding after Hanna rained heavily over the mountainous region for four days.

Government and UN convoys attempting to deliver food to the affected areas have been "attacked by famished people," the official said.

"All roads able to access Gonaives are cut either by bridges that have collapsed, by trees that have fallen down, or by waters that have washed away parts of the streets," Myrta Kaulard ,a UN food agency representative, said.

The UN World Food Program has said it will send a boat with food supplies from the capital Port-au-Prince to Gonaives.

Relief supplies worth about $250,000 have arrived in Haiti, Mari Tolliver, a US embassy spokesperson, said.

"The idea is to get [the aid to Gonaives] within the next day or two. Every effort is being made," she said.

Storm expected

Helicopters from the UN peacekeeping mission in Haiti have rescued survivors of the storm from rooftops in Gonaives.

UN officials say they are also seeking ways for the helicopters to deliver food, water and water purification tablets.
 
"I don't know how much longer we will remain alive," Germain Michelet, a priest who took refuge from the flooding on the second floor of the archbishop's office, said.

"If we are forced to go through another night under these conditions, there will not be many survivors."

A category four storm, Ike, is also set to shave northern Hispaniola – the island shared by Haiti and the Dominican Republic – on Saturday.

"We have not yet informed the population about Ike. We do not want to cause panic," Ronald Semelfort, an official with Haiti's weather service, said.

The disaster comes days after hurricane Gustav and tropical storm Fay swept Haiti, killing 117 people across the country.

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