Penticton Herald

New data on Hurricane Maria

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SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Eight days after Hurricane Maria devastated Puerto Rico, Efrain Perez felt a pain in his chest.

Doctors near his small town sent him to Puerto Rico’s main hospital for emergency surgery for an aortic aneurysm. But when the ambulance pulled into the parking lot in the capital, San Juan, after a more than two-hour drive, a doctor ran out to stop it.

“He said, ‘Don’t bring him in here, I can’t care for him. I don’t have power. I don’t have water. I don’t have an anesthesio­logist,”’ Perez’s daughter, Nerybelle, recalled.

The 95-year-old Perez died as the ambulance drove him back to southweste­rn Puerto Rico but he is not included in the island’s official hurricane death toll of 64 people, a figure at the centre of a growing legal and political fight over the response to the Category 4 storm that hit Puerto Rico on Sept. 20, 2017.

Facing at least three lawsuits demanding more data on the death toll, Puerto Rico’s government released new informatio­n that added detail to the growing consensus that thousands of people died as an indirect result of the storm.

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