Bloated corpses and weeping relatives filled morgues as Haitians faced yet another tragedy in a year marked by revolts, military interventions and deadly floods. At least 622 were killed by Tropical Storm Jeanne and officials expect to find many more bodies.
The corpses of two children lay on a sidewalk on Monday in Gonaives, where one-third of the dead brought to the hospital were children. More than 500 people had died in the sprawling northern city, said Toussaint Kongo-Doudou, a spokesman for the UN mission.
PHOTO: AP
Another 17 died in the nearby town of Terre Neuve, agriculture official Madiro Morilus said, and 56 bodies were found in the northern city of Port-de-Paix, according to Kongo-Doudou.
Dieufort Deslorges, a spokesman for the government civil protection agency, reported another 49 bodies recovered in other villages and towns, most in the northwest.
"We expect to find dozens more bodies, especially in Gonaives, as ... floodwaters recede," Deslorges said.
Tropical Storm Jeanne entered the Caribbean last week, killing seven people in the US territory of Puerto Rico before heading to the Dominican Republic where it killed at least 18.
The toll is highest in Haiti, one of the poorest countries in the world where deforestation has made even light rain deadly. More than 90 percent of Haiti's trees have been chopped down, mostly to make charcoal. Without roots and foliage, there is nothing to hold water back from low-lying towns.
The world's first black republic and the only one to launch a successful rebellion against slavery, Haiti marked 200 years of independence amid political turmoil in January. A month later, a three-month rebellion ousted president Jean-Bertrand Aristide and brought a US-led military force. In May, disaster struck again with floods that killed more than 3,000 people on the Haitian-Dominican border on the island of Hispaniola.
Jeanne regained hurricane strength on Monday, but was far out in the Atlantic, posing no threat to land.
"I lost my kids and there's nothing I can do," said Jesner Estimable, 35, who brought the body of his two-year-old daughter to Argentinian peacekeepers on Monday.
Soldiers put the corpse in a body bag while her mother wailed. Another one of the couple's children was still missing.
"All I have is complete despair and the clothes I'm wearing," he said, pointing to a floral dress and ripped pants borrowed from a neighbor.
In Gonaives, a city of about a quarter million people, residents waded through ankle-deep mud outside the mayor's office, where workers were shoveling out mud and doctors treated the wounded. Aid workers were helping a woman give birth.
Floodwaters destroyed homes and crops from corn to onions in the Artibonite region that is Haiti's breadbasket, and turned roads into torrential rivers up to 3m deep.
Katya Silme, 18, said her family spent the night in a tree because their house was flooded.
"Now we have nothing. We have not eaten anything since the floods" Silme said.
Argentine troops said they helped treat 140 injured, most for cuts to feet and legs. Officials said another 500 others were treated Monday at city hall, where doctors, nurses and medication are urgently needed.
Three trucks carrying Red Cross relief supplies rolled in Monday, but two were mobbed by people who grabbed blankets and towels. UN troops stood by watching. Only one truck arrived intact with tents.
One man stood outside the flooded base used by Argentine troops, asking soldiers to remove 11 bodies that were floating in his house, including four brothers and a sister.
"I would like to see if the soldiers could do something about these bodies," said Jean-Saint Manus, a 30-year-old student. "The door was closed. Everybody was trapped inside."
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