Los Angeles Times

An uninhabita­ble wreck

After Irma, Barbuda isn’t ready for evacuees’ return

- By Ann M. Simmons

CODRINGTON, Barbuda — It was a grim homecoming.

Crumpled sheet metal, shattered glass, snapped wooden planks, clothing and remnants of refrigerat­ors, stoves and flat-screen television­s were strewn where a village bustled the day before Hurricane Irma visited this tiny Caribbean island in early September.

Days after Irma left, another hurricane seemed poised to strike Barbuda, and all 1,800 people were ordered to evacuate to neighborin­g Antigua. The second storm missed. But a month later, residents were trickling back to see what they could salvage.

“When I look at it, all I can say is that we’re lucky to be alive,” said 53-year-old Devon Christian, who lost one of his two houses as well as his job. The storm decimated the Coco Point Lodge, the luxury resort where he tended bar for more than three decades.

He said he was determined to rebuild his life there: “This is my home, and that’s where I want to be.”

It’s the predominan­t sentiment among the people of Barbuda, the vast majority of whom remain on Antigua, 35 miles to the south. But the damage is so extensive that officials are dissuading the displaced from moving back anytime soon — leaving them largely dependent on the generosity of their hosts.

The two islands, both former British colonies, were granted independen­ce in 1981 as a single country known as Antigua and Bar-

buda. But it is unclear how long the goodwill of the 93,000 residents of Antigua will last. The Barbudans are already straining the health, education and social service systems there.

“People become overwhelme­d with the enormity of the help they have to provide, and they have to go into their own resources,” said Cleon Athill, vice president of a grass-roots citizen group called the Movement, which has been collecting donations of food, clothing and other supplies. “People have been coming and saying, for example, ‘I have two people in my house; all my food has run out. Can you please provide me with some?’ ”

‘Sense of normalcy’

Shellshock­ed from the storm, Gloria Cephas arrived on Antigua with six of her children and no possession­s other than the clothes they wore.

Her savior was a property manager, James Richards. After a church member called to ask him for help housing evacuees, he arranged for Cephas to live for free in an upscale two-bedroom townhouse with a deck overlookin­g the harbor in the capital, St. John’s.

“It was something I had to do,” Richards said. “Going through such a traumatic experience, it will give families some sense of normalcy. They have a roof over their head.”

Cephas’ eyes welled with tears as she described the devastatio­n back home, a place where nearly everything was within walking distance — markets, schools and jobs — and everybody knew everybody else.

“I’m hoping for Barbuda to be rebuilt,” she said. “I’m hoping to get back my house. But for right now, we have no choice but to stay. We miss home, but what do we return to?

“The best thing for us is to stay put in Antigua until we can get something sorted out,” she said.

Richards said the family could remain until at least the end of October.

About 320 people wound up in shelters, including the local cricket stadium. But most were taken in by relatives, friends or strangers.

Alaida Deazle and her husband, son, daughter, son-in-law and three grandchild­ren moved into the apartment on the top floor of Morvel Francis’ house.

“When I heard of the terrible disaster ... I was absolutely horrified,” said Francis, a 67-year-old social worker. “I just wanted to help as many people as possible.”

The Deazles have “become like a part of my family,” she said.

“Thank God for Mrs. Francis,” Deazle said. “She came just in the nick of time. God sent her.”

The sudden influx on Antigua, however, has not been easy to provide for.

Roughly half of the newcomers are adults who need to find work. Schools must accommodat­e an extra 600 children. The elderly need medical care.

The strain has been compounded by the arrival of hundreds of people from neighborin­g Dominica, which was ravaged by Hurricane Maria on Sept. 18. Other storm refugees have come from St. Martin and the British Virgin Islands.

Michael Joseph, president of the country’s Red Cross Society, called the situation a humanitari­an crisis and predicted that Antiguans now playing host could become victims of their own generosity.

“They now have an increase in electricit­y, water, transporta­tion costs,” he said. “This is going to increase the vulnerabil­ity of families that are already facing their own personal challenges.”

The government is trying to ease the burden by fixing up an old hotel and other buildings to turn them into long-term housing.

“Once these are finished, we will move the families in there, which will give them some greater dignity in terms of the present space that is available now,” said Philmore Mullin, director of the National Office of Disaster Services.

But allowing people to get too comfortabl­e comes with its own risk for officials: The more the newcomers settle in, the less likely they may be to leave.

“We’re not in a hurry,” said Charles Nelson, 60, who was staying at the cricket stadium with his partner and their four children, ages 5 to 12. They had to leave their dog behind in Barbuda.

“We would have to rebuild from scratch,” Nelson said. “The kids are in school, and they like it here.”

‘Totally devastated’

Not that Barbuda could support its own population right now.

“The main infrastruc­ture is totally devastated,” said Arthur Nibbs, the minister of agricultur­e, lands, fisheries and Barbuda affairs. “There’s no electricit­y, there’s no water. There’s no security. It cannot be more challengin­g. My advice to them is that they should not be in a rush to return.”

In an interview with The Times, the nation’s prime minister, Gaston Browne, described the 62-squaremile island — best known by outsiders for its pink beaches and tropical seabird sanctuary — as “uninhabita­ble.”

He said that at least 90% of all homes suffered some type of damage and that most of those would require significan­t reconstruc­tion or were destroyed. Preliminar­y estimates have put the cost of rebuilding at $250 million, more than 12% of the country’s gross domestic product.

The island’s main inhabitant­s now are brigades of government workers sent back to clean debris from the streets, spray against mosquitoes and pick up the carcasses of cattle, sheep, donkeys and dogs that were among Irma’s victims.

To provide for the workers, the island’s main supermarke­t, bakery and pharmacy have been fast-tracked for renovation, Mullin said.

Repair work is also scheduled to begin soon on buildings that suffered minor damage and can be made habitable relatively easily, he said. The government also plans to provide tents — and possibly prefabrica­ted buildings — in which Barbudans could live while fixing their homes.

Supply shipments to Barbuda have been hampered by silt that was deposited during the storm and is blocking barges and other large vessels from docking on the island.

Most of Barbuda’s only hospital was destroyed. An emergency medical post has been set up in one section of the building that survived, according to the country’s health minister, Molwyn Joseph. Medical technician­s were rotating into the facility for two days at a time.

Browne, the prime minister, has a grander vision for Barbuda: rebuilding it as an eco-friendly island and establishi­ng a medical tourism industry that would draw patients with the island’s warm weather and discount prices on healthcare. Talks were underway with various U.S. hospitals, he said.

The initiative would help develop an economy on Barbuda and ensure residents eventually go home, he said.

“It is in our interest to get them back there as soon as possible,” Browne said. “We need them to be part of the rebuilding.”

Carl Jason Francis was ready to take up the call.

He and his wife were evacuated to Antigua by helicopter after their 2-yearold son, Carl Francis Jr., was blown out of his godmother’s arms during the storm and killed — the lone death on Barbuda from the hurricane.

The family buried the boy in late September — on Antigua.

“It’s not easy being over here, when you’re accustomed to Barbuda,” said Francis, 50. “I’m going back to clean up.”

 ?? Jose Jimenez Tirado For The Times ?? KEDAR CEPHAS, 8, plays outside the townhouse on Antigua where he and his family are staying after fleeing neighborin­g Barbuda in Hurricane Irma’s wake.
Jose Jimenez Tirado For The Times KEDAR CEPHAS, 8, plays outside the townhouse on Antigua where he and his family are staying after fleeing neighborin­g Barbuda in Hurricane Irma’s wake.
 ?? Ann Simmons Los Angeles Times ?? DEVON CHRISTIAN walks through his neighbor’s f looded home on Barbuda. One of his own houses was destroyed by Hurricane Irma.
Ann Simmons Los Angeles Times DEVON CHRISTIAN walks through his neighbor’s f looded home on Barbuda. One of his own houses was destroyed by Hurricane Irma.
 ?? Jose Jimenez Tirado For The Times ?? GLORIA CEPHAS could salvage only one passport from her Barbuda home before evacuating to Antigua. “We miss home,” she said, “but what do we return to?”
Jose Jimenez Tirado For The Times GLORIA CEPHAS could salvage only one passport from her Barbuda home before evacuating to Antigua. “We miss home,” she said, “but what do we return to?”
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States