New York Daily News

Scramble for shelter

Back-to-back hurricanes test Hondurans

- BY CLAUDIO ESCALON

SAN PEDRO SULA, Honduras — Shelters for people whose homes were flooded or damaged by hurricanes Eta and Iota in Honduras are now so crowded that thousands of victims have taken refuge under highway overpasses or bridges.

The Internatio­nal Red Cross estimates that about 4.2 million people were affected by the backto-back Category 4 hurricanes in November in Honduras, Nicaragua and Guatemala. Several hundred thousand are in shelters or informal camps across the region.

But nowhere are the evacuated victims piled up more densely than in the northern Honduras city of San Pedro Sula, where some neighborho­ods are still under water. The evacuees say they fear that even when they are eventually allowed to return to their flooded neighborho­ods, they will find everything gone.

Orlando Antonio Linares oversees a municipal shelter at a school in San Pedro Sula, where almost 500 hurricane victims have taken refuge. There are about 84 shelters across the city, holding as many

100,000 people.

“There is a shortage of everything,” he said, referring to water, food and medicine. “There is a shortage because, after these two hurricanes, the need is so great.”

The situation also reflects the difficulty of sheltering natural disaster victims amid the coronaviru­s pandemic. There is no room for social distancing at the school, and few people wear face masks.

“We are working against COVID,” said Linares, noting “we give people the material [masks], but then they don’t use it. We have to educate people.”

For the moment, evacuees are much more worried about obtaining basic necessitie­s, and dreading what they will find when they return to their homes.

Couple Rebeca Diaz and Jose Alberto Murillo and their five children have been at the shelter for about two weeks, after Eta and then Iota flooded their neighborho­od.

“We have been sleeping on the floor for two weeks, the children are sleeping on the floor,” said Murillo. “We have been forgotten.”

Diaz is more worried about their home. “I need roofing sheets,” she said. “I have no way to get a roof over our heads.”

Housewife Irma Sarmiento voiced similar concerns. Her house in the Colonia Nuevo San Juan neighborho­od, she said, is still under water.

“I feel the future is uncertain. We have nothing left,” said Sarmiento. “You work your whole life to be left with nothing.”

“What will we have when we go back? Nothing,” she said.

Still, there are those who are worse off. Former maquila factory worker Jarlin Antonio Lorenzo said he couldn’t find room at a shelter; instead, he and almost 500 other people have camped out under a highway overpass.

“There are no bathrooms, people go up into the hills to go the bathroom,” he said. “People are dying of hunger here ... the shelters are full.”

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 ?? AP ?? Hurricane victims take refuge in a shelter (top) and under a bridge (above) in San Pedro Sula, Honduras, in the wake of Category 4 Hurricanes Eta and Iota which devastated Central America.
AP Hurricane victims take refuge in a shelter (top) and under a bridge (above) in San Pedro Sula, Honduras, in the wake of Category 4 Hurricanes Eta and Iota which devastated Central America.

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