USA TODAY US Edition

Weary Dorian refugees descend on Nassau

Evacuation centers busy as relief groups arrive

- Trevor Hughes

NASSAU, Bahamas – They straggle through the door in small groups, uncertaint­y written across their faces.

A green or yellow band wraps around each person’s wrist. Green bands are for those with someplace to stay the night, maybe with friends or family. They’re the easy ones.

Yellow bands are harder. Those wrap the wrists of Hurricane Dorian refugees who have no one to help them here in Nassau, the capital island of this coral archipelag­o nation still staggered by the biggest hurricane to hit the Bahamas, a terrifying­ly violent storm that sat atop neighborin­g Abaco and Grand Bahama for days.

Nonprofits, from the Red Cross to Rotary and church groups, are rapidly improving refugee processing on Nassau, staged out of a stifling warehouse-size tent filled with donated supplies and energetic volunteers who are processing the wrist-banded refugees.

“They wasn’t doing anything in Abaco. So it’s great to see people caring. It’s so nice,” said Cecil Grant, 31, as he cradled his daughter, Yalissa, 7 months.

Sunday found Grant, his fiancée and their three kids at the shelter at the Nassau airport as evacuation planes and helicopter­s clattered overhead.

Grant’s family slept at a friend’s house Saturday night after an agonizing wait to leave Abaco, where their house was destroyed a week ago. They initially took shelter at a government building but then crashed at a friend’s. Thursday they headed to the Marsh Harbour airport to try to evacuate.

“We walked in the rain to the airport pushing shopping carts with all our luggage,” he said. “We waited all day there and then we walked to where we were. And went back to the airport the next day. And the next day.”

Neither Marsh Harbour nor the Treasure Cay airports have functionin­g toilets, leaving the hundreds of people waiting there each day without access to running water or sanitary facilities, although volunteers had delivered drinking water and food.

“It was very nasty there,” Grant said. The filthy conditions was one of the primary drivers for Grant to move his family to Nassau, where he hopes to stay after lining up a job as a landscaper or chef. Rescue workers are dealing with evacuees in Nassau – 800 came Saturday; 1,000 Sunday via helicopter, boat and airplane – in addition to the existing crisis on Abaco and Grand Bahama.

Doctors have been warning of the health crisis that could easily erupt on those two hard-hit islands, especially Abaco, where a toxic stew of water sits atop one of the largest Marsh Harbour neighborho­ods once home to thousands of Haitian immigrants using outhouses for toilets.

Authoritie­s say at least 44 people have died, and the number is expected to rise dramatical­ly as formal search teams begin their work in earnest.

All day Sunday, refugees poured into the processing center as volunteers asked them to take only a few days’ worth of clothing and children played with donated toys, the immediate crisis past. The sound of Haitian creole began to fill the room as more and more Haitian-born refugees arrived.

Rescue groups are also reaching Abaco with shiploads of supplies and equipment. The Red Cross expected its cargo boat to arrive in Marsh Harbour on Sunday, bringing both aid and Restoring Family Links teams to help trace missing or out-of-context people.

While cellphones work intermitte­ntly in Marsh Harbour, people on the island are scrounging for gasoline to power generators and recharge phones.

In Nassau, the Red Cross had more than 200 volunteers collecting and distributi­ng supplies and food directly to evacuees and also to government-run shelters.

USAID Administra­tor Mark Green met with Bahamian Prime Minister Hubert Minnis on Sunday after briefly touring Abaco, pledging the U.S. government’s full support. The U.S. military is assisting with relief efforts being led by USAID, which has brought in search teams to pick through the rubble while simultaneo­usly preparing for a long road to recovery.

 ?? TREVOR HUGHES/USA TODAY ?? Hurricane Dorian evacuee Cecil Grant, 31, cradles his daughter, Yalissa, 7 months, while he makes a phone call at a shelter in Nassau.
TREVOR HUGHES/USA TODAY Hurricane Dorian evacuee Cecil Grant, 31, cradles his daughter, Yalissa, 7 months, while he makes a phone call at a shelter in Nassau.

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