The Jerusalem Post

After Hurricane Dorian, families turn to technology in search for the missing

- • By MATTHEW LAVIETES and REBEKAH F WARD

as hurricane dorian left thousands missing in the Bahamas, south Carolina resident daniel huggins worried franticall­y about his mother on Green turtle Cay and, with no word from us or Bahamas authoritie­s, turned to Facebook for news.

“that was really all that we could do,” huggins, a 31-year-old commercial driver, said.

his anxious scramble is being repeated by the friends and relatives of Bahamians not heard from since the hurricane blasted ashore on september 1, killing at least 30 people and flattening buildings on Grand Bahama Island and the abaco Islands.

Finding little informatio­n through official channels, relatives are getting resourcefu­l and turning to technology including social media, improvised websites, borrowed Gps devices and satellite phones.

huggins posted in Facebook groups about his mother, mary anne huggins, on Green turtle Cay, a small barrier island with about 450 residents. two days later, his mother reached him with a cryptic message from a Global positionin­g system to his cell phone. she later called him on a satellite phone but lost the signal after 15 seconds.

“she almost sounded hysterical just because of how excited she was to hear from me, and she said, ‘hey, I’m safe,’” said huggins. “I just want to wrap my arms around her, but it feels really good to have heard her voice.”

Immediatel­y after the hurricane struck, people asked about family members on existing Facebook community pages. nassau-based real estate agent Vanessa pritchard-ansell started a group on sunday specifical­ly for finding relatives.

But the scope of the disaster soon overwhelme­d the page, and pritchard-ansell worked with others to create a website where people have shared more than 6,000 names of missing people. It is still far from complete.

‘ADRENALINE AND A SENSE OF URGENCY’

the death toll from dorian stood at 30 on Friday, officials said. as thousands remain missing, the final toll is feared to be much higher.

“there are so many people unaccounte­d for and so many lives lost,” said 22-year-old simeka Williams, who left Freeport days before the storm to start medical school in jamaica.

unable to reach many of her family, Williams and other people compiled a database of several thousand missing individual­s on Grand Bahamas, and she has been coordinati­ng with the us Coast Guard to confirm those who are found.

she has not had news of her relatives but is trying to stay hopeful. “I’m just clinging onto the fact that I’m helping and that we’ll be reunited soon,” she said.

“adrenaline and a sense of urgency is what is keeping me going. I haven’t actually had the time to sit down and process the magnitude of loss.”

 ?? (Loren Elliott/Reuters) ?? A MAN rides a bicycle past damage caused by Hurricane Dorian in Marsh Harbour, Great Abaco, Bahamas.
(Loren Elliott/Reuters) A MAN rides a bicycle past damage caused by Hurricane Dorian in Marsh Harbour, Great Abaco, Bahamas.

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