lunes, 29 de octubre de 2012

Cuba and Haiti struggle to recover from Hurricane Sandy

Posted on Sunday, 10.28.12



Hurricane Sandy



Cuba and Haiti struggle to recover from Hurricane Sandy



In the two hard-hit countries, where Hurricane Sandy caused 66 deaths,

residents are coping with life without electricity and water. In

Santiago de Cuba alone, some 137,000 homes were damaged.

By MIMI WHITEFIELD And JACQUELINE CHARLES

mwhitefield@MiamiHerald.com



Even before Hurricane Sandy tore through Santiago de Cuba last week, a

humble wood-frame church called San Pedrito was living on borrowed time

with beams ravaged by termites and an ancient tin roof that let in the rain.



But San Pedrito crumbled Thursday as Sandy's 115 mph winds ripped Cuba's

second largest city. "It is totally on the ground, but we were able to

recover the statue of Our Lady, the crucifix and the bell,'' said the

Rev. Luis del Castillo, a retired Uruguayan bishop who now works in Cuba.



There is scarcely any area of Santiago that was left unscathed. Photos

show neighborhoods that look like trash piles of construction materials

with wood beams tossed like toothpicks and tin roofs and tiles scattered

on the ground. Walls of some homes lean at crazy angles or tilt toward

streets still littered with huge trees.



As Sandy bore down on the U.S. East Coast on Sunday, the two hardest hit

Caribbean nations — Cuba and Haiti — concentrated on trying to put

together what Sandy tore apart.



In Cuba, where the death toll stood at 11, state-run media reported that

137,000 homes in Santiago were damaged, including 43,000 that lost their

roofs and at least 15,000 that collapsed. Government estimates pegged

losses at 2.1 billion pesos ($2.1 billion at the official rate Cuba uses

for imports and $87.5 million using the exchange rate for everyday

purchases in Cuba). But that figure is expected to rise when losses from

tourism, the sugar industry and other sectors are added in.



In Holguín province where Sandy exited Cuba, the Cuban News Agency said

that 17,000 homes suffered damage and there were significant losses to

crops and livestock. The municipalities of Mayari, Banes, Antilla,

Rafael Freyre, Baguano, Urbano Noris, Sagua de Tanamo and Cueto were

among the hardest hit.



But Sandy also brought driving rain, which caused severe flooding in the

central Cuba provinces of Villa Clara and Sancti Spíritus. Cuban leader

Raúl Castro visited them Saturday and has said he intends to travel to

eastern Cuba as well.



"We can say that we have had a great hurricane in the east and a small

'Flora' (a destructive 1964 hurricane) in the center of the country,"

said Castro, according to the state-run National Information Agency.



Haitian President Michel Martelly also was on the streets of his

devastated country over the weekend, personally handing out aid kits.



Hundreds of residents from the Jalousie slum crowded a Petionville

street mid-afternoon Sunday for the arrival of Martelly and a truck

carrying the kits, which included candles, spaghetti and other foodstuffs.



In Haiti, 51 people were reported dead and 15 missing. More than 200,000

people were homeless and nearly 17,200 people had been placed in

shelters. The government was serving hot meals and handing out $25 cash

vouchers to shelter residents in the city of Les Cayes in southwest Haiti.



Damages were still being tallied Sunday and the death toll could rise.



Officials from Les Anglais, a small coastal village in southern Haiti,

told a local radio station they feared homes may have washed out to sea.

The road to the village remains impassable.



Another concern in Haiti is that cholera cases may increase. The

International Organization for Migration reported that 16 new cases had

already been recorded since Sandy's pass.



In Cuba, residents described how people were coping with the aftermath

of the hurricane that came ashore on a beach southwest of Santiago and

swept north across the eastern part of the island.



The Army has been clearing the streets and removing trees that have

toppled electrical poles and wires, but most of the city remains without

power, water or telephone service, said del Castillo, who was reached

via an Internet connection over the weekend.



State-run media said that electricity had been restored to about 80

percent of those who lost power in Holguín, but restoration was proving

more complicated in Santiago where 72 work brigades from around the

country were working on returning electricity.



"The churches in Santiago are in very bad shape — some are just rubble;

others have lost their roofs,'' said del Castillo. "We will celebrate

mass in the streets.''



For a country that was officially atheist until 1992, there was already

a shortage of churches and priests before Sandy hit. Now, del Castillo

said he expects the church's Casa del Misión (Mission House) program to

expand. Under the mission house concept, parish priests and nuns travel

a circuit to communities without priests and religious activities are

held in people's homes or makeshift facilities.



But he added, "The priority isn't the church buildings; it is the people.''



In a city known for its hospitality as well as for being the cradle of

the revolution, neighbors, even small children who are clearing

branches, have pitched in to help those with less, he said.



"People are just happy they're alive and they're concentrating on

rebuilding and how they can help each other,'' said del Castillo.



With windows smashed and without power, many stores are closed and food

supplies are difficult, he said. Those who have food are sharing with

neighbors and cooking on wood fires in the streets.



State-run media said the government was shipping in food, including

bread, from nearby provinces.



Some food, said del Castillo, also has begun to arrive via Caritas, the

Catholic relief organization in Cuba. Catholic Charities of the

Archdiocese of Miami is working with Caritas and Catholic Relief

Services to help those in the areas most affected by Sandy. It is

accepting monetary donations through its website (www.ccadm.org) but is

not calling for food donations at this point.



Schools have been closed since Thursday in Santiago and many that remain

intact are being used to house the homeless. Del Castillo said he has

two families that are staying at his church,



The first shipment of 12,000 roofs arrived in Santiago on Saturday via

train, according to the website of Sierra Maestra, a provincial newspaper.



The government said that was the first wave of shipments of some 84,000

roofs and 220,000 tons of cement expected to arrive in the province via

train and ship.



http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/10/28/v-fullstory/3071813/cuba-and-haiti-struggle-to-recover.html

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