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Sorrow overwhelms in Haitian storm shelter

By Joseph Guyler Delva
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Posted 05 September 2008 @ 09:33 am GMT

Survivors of Tropical Storm Hanna crowded a shelter in the Haitian port city of Gonaives on Thursday, weeping for loved ones swept away by the floods and lining up to register for food that did not arrive.

Most had eaten nothing since Hanna's torrential rains submerged Gonaives under 2 metres (6.5 feet) of water on Tuesday. Some had only the clothes on their backs, others not even that.

"I lost everything in the flooding. All I own is what I wear," said Gerta Meus, cradling her naked 2-year-old daughter.

At least 136 people died in floods and mudslides triggered by Hanna, many of them in the Gonaives area, said the civil protection office in the poorest country of the Americas.

Afflicted by political chaos, bloodshed and natural disasters since it won independence from France in a slave revolt two centuries ago, the mud-caked scenes of misery in Gonaives were not unprecedented for Haiti. The last time floods like this occurred in Gonaives in 2004, 3,000 died.

Many in Gonaives survived this time by scrambling onto rooftops as the water rose, then waded through the mud to the shelter after it receded.

Jacqueline Meranvil, 21, said she and her younger sister climbed first onto the top of a fence and from there onto their roof, "but my mother who is 60 could not climb and we couldn't help her so she died."

Hoarse from screaming and weak from hunger, Widline Jean-Louis sat on the shelter floor trying to breastfeed her 13-month-old daughter.

"The water entered my house and some people helped us get on top of the roof but when my husband was coming to join us he tried to climb on top of the roof and fell and he was taken away by the water before our eyes," Jean-Louis said.

"My daughter is very sick and nobody's there to help me."

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