Sunday, July 25, 2010

Quake-torn Haiti strike by floods World headlines The Guardian

Port-au-Prince floods

A lady walks with an powerful at a survivors stay during complicated rains in Port-au-Prince Photograph: Esteban Felix/AP

Heavy sleet has caused flooding in Haiti, murdering at slightest thirteen people as distended rivers forced people on to roofs and trapped people in cars and homes.

With 1.3 million without a country and most vital in proxy camps with small or no sanitation as a outcome of January"s earthquake, assist agencies have warned of an additional charitable mess as the stormy deteriorate looms.

Several towns and villages in southern Haiti have been flooded given Saturday, a orator for the polite puncture section said. UN infantry and Haitian military changed 500 prisoners from a prison in Les Cayes as 1.5 metres of H2O swamped the coastal city. Witnesses pronounced houses collapsed and people fled for high ground.

"At one point, people had to stand on the roofs of their homes," Joseph Yves-Marie Aubourg, the government"s deputy in the region, told Reuters. Five people died when their car was carried away, and others on feet were swept afar in the torrent.

Les Cayes mostly transient the twelve Jan upheaval that ravaged Port-au-Prince and killed some-more than 220,000, according to supervision figures. Its race was distended by family groups journey the capital.

The government, the UN, and assist agencies have all lifted the warning about the stormy season, that starts in Mar or Apr and continues until autumn.

The scale of Haiti"s disaster equates to that even a outrageous service bid has not supposing competent preserve to hundreds of thousands of people. There are 415 proxy settlements housing rounded off 550,000 upheaval survivors, according to the Organisation of International Migration. Others are vital in rubble or with relatives.

The UN aims to yield each family with dual cosmetic tarpaulins by 1 May. So far about 40% of the 1.3 million in need have perceived tents, tarpaulins or preserve toolkits, according to the Red Cross. Even if the UN reaches the target, rains could spin camps in to disease-ridden swamps.

Already the stink of human rubbish is powerful at settlements similar to Saint-Louis de Gonzague, that has one unstable toilet for 10,000 people. Doctors have reported drawn out cases of diarrhoea, intestinal pain, fever and infections. The big fears are cholera and typhoid.

It took only a couple of hours of sleet one night last month to spin a little Port-au-Prince camps in to murky quagmires. The stormy deteriorate brings pleasant torrents and, from summer, hurricanes.

Nature"s deadline has stirred the authorities to try to thin the proxy camps by induction family groups whose homes can be quickly remade and rebuilt. Others will be speedy to move in with kin or friends.

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