- 2021-08-17 05:13:13
- LAST MODIFIED: 2024-11-20 09:55:12
Haiti quake death toll rises to 1,419, injured now at 6,000
Photo Collected:
International Desk:
Dhaka, Aug-17,
A hospital in southwestern Haiti, where a powerful earthquake flattened homes, shops and other buildings over the weekend, was so overwhelmed with patients that many had to lie in patios, corridors, verandas and hallways. Then a looming storm expected to bring heavy rains Monday night forced officials to relocate them as best they could given the hospital’s poor conditions.
Even those patients
were somewhat fortunate. Haiti’s Civil Protection Agency on Monday raised the
death toll from Saturday’s earthquake to 1,419 and the number of injured to
6,000, many of whom have had to wait under the burning heat, even on an airport
tarmac, for help.
“We had planned to put
up tents (in hospital patios), but we were told that could not be safe,” said
Gede Peterson, director of Les Cayes General Hospital.
It is not the first time that staff has been forced to improvise. The refrigeration in the hospital’s morgue has not worked for three months, but after the earthquake struck Saturday, staff had to store as many as 20 bodies in the small space. Relatives quickly came to take most to private embalming services or immediate burial. By Monday only three bodies were in the morgue.
The quake, centered
about 125 kilometers (80 miles) west of the capital of Port-au-Prince, nearly
razed some towns and triggered landslides that hampered rescue efforts in a
country that is the poorest in the Western Hemisphere. Haiti already was
struggling with the coronavirus pandemic, gang violence, worsening poverty and
the political uncertainty following the July 7 assassination of President
Jovenel Moïse when the earthquake sent residents rushing to the streets.
The devastation could
soon worsen with the arrival of Tropical Depression Grace, predicted to bring
strong winds, heavy rain, mudslides and flash flooding. Les Cayes began to see
light rain Monday evening, but it could reach 15 inches (38 centimeters) in
some areas, the Civil Protection Agency said. Port-au-Prince was already seeing
heavier rains.
“We are working now to
ensure that the resources we have are going to get to the places that are
hardest hit,” said agency head Jerry Chandler, referring to the towns of Les
Cayes and Jeremie and the department of Nippes, which are in the country’s
southwestern portion.
Injured earthquake
victims continued to stream into Les Cayes’ overwhelmed general hospital, three
days after the earthquake struck. Patients waited to be treated on stair steps,
in corridors and the hospital’s open veranda.
“After two days, they
are almost always generally infected,” said Dr. Paurus Michelete, who had
treated 250 patients and was one of only three doctors on call when the quake
hit.
Meanwhile, rescuers and
scrap metal scavengers dug into the floors of a collapsed hotel Monday in this
coastal town, where 15 bodies had already been extracted. Jean Moise Fortunè,
whose brother, the hotel owner and a prominent politician, was killed in the
quake, believed there were more people trapped in the rubble.
But based on the size
of voids that workers cautiously peered into, perhaps a foot (0.3 meters) in
depth, finding survivors appeared unlikely.
As work, fuel and money
ran out, desperate Les Cayes residents searched collapsed houses for scrap
metal to sell. Others waited for money wired from abroad, a mainstay of Haiti’s
economy even before the quake.
Anthony Emile waited
six hours in a line with dozens of others trying to get money his brother had
wired from Chile, where he has worked since Haiti’s last quake.
“We have been waiting
since morning for it, but there are too many people,” said Emile, a banana
farmer who said relatives in the countryside depend on him giving them money to
survive.
Efforts to treat the
injured were difficult at the general hospital, where Michelete said pain
killers, analgesics and steel pins to mend fractures were running out amid the
crush of patients.
“We are saturated, and
people keep coming,” he said.
Josil Eliophane, 84,
crouched on the steps of the hospital, clutching an X-ray showing his shattered
arm bone and pleading for pain medication.
Michelete said he would
give one of his few remaining shots to Eliophane, who ran out of his house as
the quake hit, only to have a wall fall on him.
Nearby, on the
hospital’s open-air veranda, patients were on beds and mattresses, hooked up to
IV bags of saline fluid. Others lay in the garden under bed sheets erected to
shield them from the brutal sun. None of the patients or relatives caring for
them wore face masks amid a coronavirus surge.
Officials said the
magnitude 7.2 earthquake left more than 7,000 homes were destroyed and nearly
5,000 damaged from the quake, leaving some 30,000 families homeless. Hospitals,
schools, offices and churches also were des troyed or badly
damaged.
Underlining the dire
conditions, local officials had to negotiate with gangs in the seaside district
of Martissant to allow two humanitarian convoys a day to pass through the area,
the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs reported. The
agency called Haiti’s southern peninsula a “hot spot for gang-related
violence,” where humanitarian workers have been repeatedly attacked.
The agency said the area has been “virtually unreachable” over the past two months because of road blocks and security concerns. Agency spokeswoman Anna Jefferys said the first convoy passed through Sunday with government and U.N. personnel. and the U.N. World Food Program plans to send in food supplies via trucks Tuesday.
Prime Minister Ariel
Henry declared a one-month state of emergency for the whole country and said
the first government aid convoys had started moving help to areas where towns
were destroyed and hospitals were overwhelmed.
UNICEF Executive
Director Henrietta Fore said humanitarian needs were acute, with many Haitians
urgently needing health care, clean water and shelter. Children separated from
their parents also needed protection, she said.
“Little more than a
decade on, Haiti is reeling once again,” Fore said, referring to the 2010
earthquake that ravaged Haiti’s capital, killing tens of thousands. “And this
disaster coincides with political instability, rising gang violence, alarmingly
high rates of malnutrition among children, and the COVID-19 pandemic — for
which Haiti has received just 500,000 vaccine doses, despite requiring far
more.”
The country of 11
million people received its first batch of U.S.-donated coronavirus vaccines
only last month via a United Nations program for low-income countries.
Medical workers from
across the region were scrambling to help as hospitals in Les Cayes started
running out of space to perform surgeries.
“Basically, they need
everything,” said Dr. Inobert Pierre, a pediatrician with the nonprofit Health
Equity International, which oversees St. Boniface Hospital, about two hours
from Les Cayes.
Pierre’s medical team
was taking some patients to St. Boniface to undergo surgery, but with just two
ambulances, they could transport only four at a time.
Working with USAID, the
U.S. Coast Guard said a helicopter was transporting medical personnel from the
Haitian capital to the quake zone and evacuating injured back to
Port-au-Prince. Lt. Commander Jason Nieman, a spokesman, said other aircraft
and ships were being sent.
At the Les Cayes
hospital, Emma Cadet, 41, a carpenter’s wife, hovered over her 18-year-old son,
Charles Owen, as he awaited an operation on his broken arm. He was among the
lucky patients to have received pain medication.
Worse off was Nerison
Vendredi, 19, lying quiet but alert. No casts or splint would help her because
she apparently had suffered internal injuries and could not move.
There were some stories
of miracle survivals, but they were becoming fewer as the days passed.
Jacquelion Luxama was
leading his goats to a watering hole Saturday when a hillside collapsed on him,
trapping him amid boulders and a rockslide that stripped skin from his hip.
“I started yelling, and
luckily some other famers heard me, and they came and pulled me out, ” said
Luxama, lying on a mattress at the Les Cayes hospital.
End/Dct/Int/Sma/