GONAIVES, Haiti,
Sept 10 (Reuters) - Tens of thousands of people are struggling for
survival in this low-lying port in northern Haiti, 10 days after Tropical
Storm Hanna drowned their city in a sea of mud and filthy water.
Many
waded in search of food on Wednesday through thigh-high water polluted
by oil, the carcasses of dead animals and feces.
Hundreds of people
died in the storm but authorities said many corpses were washed out
to sea and it was difficult to give precise figures.
In Hanna's wake
came fierce Hurricane Ike this week, making things worse in Haiti's
fourth-largest city.
Police chief Ernst Dorfeuille maintains that Hanna
killed more than 500 people in the city while Daniel Dupiton, regional
coordinator of the Red Cross, said at least 450 lost their lives.
The
health department has reported 144 confirmed deaths.
Haiti has long
been a symbol of global inequality. One of the poorest countries in
the world, the Caribbean nation stands in the traditional backyard
of the United States, the world's richest nation.
Many Haitians scrape
by on a dollar a day or less and the worst cyclone in years has proved
a national catastrophe, setting back agriculture, destroying infrastructure
in the western part of the country and plunging the 300,000 residents
of Gonaives into misery.
The storm flooded around 95 percent of the
shops in the city, Dorfeuille said, but it was particularly devastating
for families -- perhaps the majority in the city -- who make money
with small-scale commerce.
Bernadette Vertillus escaped from the storm
to a shelter with her husband and her 10 children plus two others
she cares for.
"Hunger is killing us," she said because the family
had not eaten for 48 hours.
The family was sleeping on pallets in a
warehouse. Vertillus salvaged some clothes from her house but what
upset her most was losing the secondhand clothes she sold to make
a living.
Estine Thomas, 26, said she too had lost everything in the
storm and had decamped to a school with her 9-year-old daughter since
the storm. What upset her most was losing the underwear she sold to
make a living.
HEALTH CRISIS
Gonaives faces the sea and is at points
more than four feet (one meter) below sea level. Its position proved
fatal as the storm not only sent big waves cascading inland, but raised
the level of the Laquinte and other rivers. Even now, strong currents
carry debris through parts of a city.
Because Hanna downed bridges,
the only way into the city from the capital is by helicopter or boat.
From the air it is clear that the southern section of the city remains
largely flooded, the roofs and walls awash in mud and water.
For many
people there is little alternative but to rebuild and salvage everything
possible from houses filled to overflowing with water.
On one street,
dozens of women washed clothes in the dark brown water, attempting
to make them slightly cleaner. And a man pushed a motorbike through
water that rose at times to its handlebars.
Just a few hundred yards
(meters) away, the carcass of a horse lay bloated in the hot sun.
The
storm has also provoked a health crisis that could get worse unless
the city urgently brings in more clean water or builds a purification
plant, said Carl Cantave, health director of the Artibonite district
that includes Gonaives.
In the immediate aftermath of the storm, many
people suffered foot lacerations as they trudged without shoes to
safety. Many women suffered vaginal infections in the deep water,
while others were complaining of diarrhea and contagious skin disease
or scabies, Cantave said.
Cantave watched the storm unfold from his
roof and then spent three days without food.
"I could see the heads
of people and animals floating past. Whole houses were swept away,"
he said.
Despite the ordeal, Cantave said he was back at work and planning
with aid agencies to consolidate the city's health-care resources.
One positive thing was that many of the city's patients had been evacuated
prior to the storm, he said. (Additional reporting by Joseph Guyler
Delva, editing by Tom Brown and Eric Beech