Dorian Drowned People Taking Refuge in Attics with Its Storm-Surge of 20-25 Feet
Teams of dog handlers from the U.S., Canada and Belgium are uncovering more and more dead bodies among the debris of Bahamas homes hit by Hurricane Dorian, the Health Ministry said.
The Category 5 storm was so powerful that it drowned people who had been seeking refuge in their attics, swept others out to sea, and crushed steel-reinforced concrete structures, according to Health Minister Duane Sands.
“To imagine the combination of 200 mph winds, a 20-25 foot sea surge, torrential rain, the power out, communications out and you have, and this is no cliche, a perfect storm,” Sands said in a phone interview Wednesday.
Hundreds of searchers, including foreigners and local security forces, are going door to door across Abaco and Grand Bahama, the islands worst hit by Dorian’s strike last week. It could take weeks or months for them to finish their work, Sands said.
The official death toll currently stands at 50, but is likely to go much higher, he said.
In a nation where 80% of the land is less than 32 feet (10 meters) above sea level, people were confronted by “20 feet of ocean in their backyard,” he said.
Rescue crews are evacuating families to other islands. Thousands are living in shelters.
“When I say people have lost everything, that is a fair statement, they have lost everything,” he said. “The clothes on their backs, shoes, underwear, food, water, medication.”
The main hospital on Grand Bahama, where about 50,000 lived is now shut, and most of the schools on the islands have been destroyed, Sands said.
Photograph: Debris fills an area called The Mudd in the aftermath of Hurricane Dorian in Marsh Harbor, Abaco Island, Bahamas, Sunday, Sept. 8, 2019. Dorian was the most powerful hurricane in the northwestern Bahamas’ recorded history. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)
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