Nearly 900 people are known to have been killed by Hurricane Matthew in
Haiti, with aid officials saying up to 90% of some areas have been destroyed.
Some of the hardest-hit towns are yet to be reached by land, and there are
fears more bodies will be found.
Parts of Haiti's south had faced "complete destruction", aid workers told the
BBC.
Hurricane Matthew has now made landfall in South Carolina in the US, having
battered Florida on Friday.
The US National Hurricane Center (NHC) has downgraded it to a Category 1
hurricane, with maximum sustained winds having decreased to 75mph (120km/
h).
But the NHC warned of a " serious inland flooding event unfolding ".
The storm is due to hit North Carolina later.
Hurricane Matthew in pictures
Hurricane response: How do Haiti and Florida compare?
Aid lessons from Haiti quake
Rescue efforts are under way in Haiti to assess the destruction left in the wake
of the most powerful Caribbean storm in a decade.
At least 877 people were confirmed dead late on Friday, local officials told
Reuters news agency.
One of the survivors in the village of Chantal told Reuters a tree had flattened
his house.
"The entire house fell on us. I couldn't get out," Jean-Pierre Jean-Donald said.
"People came to lift the rubble, and then we saw my wife, who had died."
The storm passed directly through the Tiburon peninsula - encompassing
Haiti's entire southern coast - driving the sea inland and flattening homes with
winds of up to 230km/h (145mph) and torrential rain.
The main road connecting the capital, Port-au-Prince, to the southern coast has
been destroyed.
Kate Corrigan, a nurse working with charity Innovating Health International in
Port-au-Prince, told the BBC some small towns were almost inaccessible.
"What we've seen thus far has been a fairly large-spread destruction in the
south, potentially at points of 90% destruction in some of locations - complete
destruction."
Her team's helicopter had not managed to land in some of the damaged areas.
Government and UN officials estimate that some 350,000 people need help.
Non-governmental organisations (NGOs) say communication with the areas
worst affected has been hampered by downed power lines and a lack of phone
coverage.
The US is sending the naval vessel USS Mesa Verde to assist with rescue
efforts, as well as nine military helicopters to help deliver food and water to the
hardest-hit areas.
The Red Cross has launched an emergency appeal for $6.9m (£5.6m) "to
provide medical, shelter, water and sanitation assistance to 50,000 people".
This comes amid concerns about a surge in cholera cases, with the sanitation
system in Haiti already overwhelmed.
Haiti - one of the world's poorest countries - has never fully recovered from the
earthquake in 2010 that killed thousands of people and a cholera epidemic that
followed.
After slicing through Haiti and Cuba, Hurricane Matthew pounded the Bahamas
on Thursday but no fatalities were reported there. Four people were killed in
Florida as the storm hit on Friday.
More than a million homes have lost power.
Four people died in the neighbouring Dominican Republic on Tuesday.
US President Barack Obama on Friday warned that, while southern Florida had
been spared the worst, the hurricane remained very dangerous, with the risk of
a storm surge and flooding.
A state of emergency is in place in several states and at least three million
inhabitants have been ordered to evacuate their homes.
Saturday, 8 October 2016
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 Comments