The Guardian (USA)

Devastatio­n 'still unfolding' in Bahamas as Dorian death toll rises to at least 50

- Miranda Bryant and agencies

Aid workers in the Bahamas said the devastatio­n of Hurricane Dorian is “still unfolding” on Tuesday after the official death toll rose to at least 50 and tens of thousands of people remained homeless.

Speaking on Tuesday morning, nine days since the hurricane made landfall over the Bahamas, where it remained for two days, Sadye Francis, director of One Eleuthera Foundation, a not-forprofit rehousing people on Eleuthera Island, said some people will have “nowhere to go”.

“The true depth of the devastatio­n in Abaco and Grand Bahama is still unfolding. Persons are being evacuated to Eleuthera by land and sea from Abaco,” she told a press conference for the National Emergency Management Agency (Nema) in the Bahamas capital, Nassau, on New Providence island. “While some will remain in Eleuthera or travel to Nassau or elsewhere to stay with family and friends there are still others who have nowhere to go.”

The United Nations estimates that 76,000 people in Grand Bahama and the Abaco islands have been left homeless by the hurricane and are in need of help.

Carl Smith, a Nema spokespers­on, said 2,043 people displaced by Hurricane Dorian were in shelters on New Providence, while others stayed with friends or relatives. He said more shelters will be opened as they are needed.

“We are making improvemen­ts as we address this disaster and seemingly hopeless situation. But there’s hope, we’re making progress,” he said.

It comes after the health minister, Duane Sands, confirmed the death toll had increased to 50. The previous count, on Sunday, was 44.

The deadly category 5 storm, one of the most powerful Caribbean storms on record, brought gusts of more than 200mph and a storm surge of close to 24ft and devastatio­n – flattening homes and destroying infrastruc­ture.

Caribbean emergency officials said mortuary facilities on the island of New Providence were “overwhelme­d” with bodies of victims, and the Caribbean Disaster Management Agency said bodies were being temporaril­y stored in refrigerat­ed containers.

It also reported increased environmen­tal health concerns in the northern islands and a stench of dead animals and potentiall­y human bodies.

The government estimates that as many as 10,000 people from the Abaco

Islands alone will need food, water and temporary housing while the northern region is cleared of debris. It is considerin­g setting up tent or container cities.

Thousands of survivors left homeless by the disaster are arriving in Nassau by boat and plane seeking shelter after their homes and livelihood­s were destroyed.

Some waited in hotel lobbies, others were driven by bus to shelters or sought accommodat­ion from friends and family.

The storm, which also hit the Virgin Islands, North Carolina’s Outer Banks and near Halifax, Nova Scotia, is believed to have killed seven others in the south-east of the US and Puerto Rico.

 ??  ?? A destroyed home in Great Abaco, Bahamas, on Monday. Photograph: Jose Jimenez/Getty Images
A destroyed home in Great Abaco, Bahamas, on Monday. Photograph: Jose Jimenez/Getty Images

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