Helicopters rescued survivors from rooftops in the flooded Haitian city of Gonaives as Tropical Storm Hanna claimed at least 61 lives, the third major storm to hammer Haiti in as many weeks.
Hanna left scenes of devastation with hundreds of homes destroyed amid desperate rescue efforts as forecasters warned the storm could strengthen into a hurricane before it heads to the southeastern US coastline.
As two more storm systems churned in the Atlantic, the flooding in Haiti revived memories of lethal Tropical Storm Jeanne in 2004, when about 3,000 people were killed, mostly in the northern city.
PHOTO: AP
“Something must be done quickly,” said Germain Michelet, a priest who took refuge from the flooding on the second floor of the archbishop’s office in Gonaives. “I don’t know how much longer we will remain alive. If we are forced to go through another night under these conditions, there will not be many survivors.”
The UN peacekeeping mission in Haiti carried out numerous helicopter missions in Gonaives to rescue those stranded by the high water.
“We have managed to recover two dozen people who were trapped on rooftops,” said mission spokeswoman Sophie Boutaud de la Combe, adding that nine injured people were flown to the capital for treatment.
The hospital in Gonaives was also flooded, a doctor told local radio.
“The patients are grouped in one room,” the unnamed doctor said. “The situation is critical.”
Haiti is especially prone to flooding and landslides because of widespread deforestation on its section of the island of Hispaniola, which it shares with the Dominican Republic.
Tens of thousands of people in both countries were forced to take refuge because of the driving rain and flooding, though there were no casualties reported in the Dominican Republic.
Hanna struck Haiti one week after it was hit by Hurricane Gustav, which killed 77 people. Two weeks ago, Tropical Storm Fay sparked flooding in Haiti that left about 40 people dead.
As Hanna churned, the government of the Bahamas downgraded its hurricane watch to a tropical storm warning, while the US embassy in Nassau announced it would be closed yesterday and today.
The National Hurricane Center in Miami called Hanna “tenacious” and said it would “regain hurricane status in a day or two, but it could occur earlier.”
Hanna could strike the US coasts of the Carolinas or move “very close” to the area in coming days, the center said in its latest advisory.
Two other storms were also moving across the Atlantic.
Ike strengthened to a Category 4 hurricane by early yesterday, hours after it developed from tropical storm to hurricane status.
And Tropical Storm Josephine, in the eastern Atlantic 605km west of the southernmost Cape Verde islands, was expected to weaken as it moved west-northwest yesterday.
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