'One of the greatest national crises in our country's history'

MARSH HARBOUR: The wreckage of pulverized homes, beached boats and floodwaters covered miles of the Bahamas in Hurricane Dorian's wake yesterday, as rescuers searched for survivors of the worst storm to ever strike the island nation. The scope of the damage and humanitarian crisis was still unfolding as aerial video of the Abaco Islands in the northern Bahamas showed wide swaths of destruction and officials warned the current death toll of seven was likely to rise. Aid agencies estimated that tens of thousands of people would need food and other support.


"We are in the midst of one of the greatest national crises in our country's history," Bahamas Prime Minister Hubert Minnis told a news conference. "No effort or resources will be held back." Some storm victims remained on rooftops, awaiting rescue, according to media reports early yesterday. "We can expect more deaths to be recorded. This is just preliminary information," Minnis said. "Marsh Harbor has suffered, I would estimate, in excess of 60 percent damage to their homes," Minnis said, referring to the port on Great Abaco.


"The Mud, as we know, has been completely destroyed or decimated," he said referring to a shantytown known as the Mud and the Peas. Aerial video of the Bahamas' Great Abaco Island showed miles of flooded neighborhoods, littered with upturned boats, and shipping containers scattered like toys. Many buildings had walls or roofs partly ripped off.
"Victims are being loaded on flatbed trucks across Abaco," one Twitter user with the handle @mvp242 said, describing a rain-blurred photograph of limp bodies strewn across a truck bed. Other posts on Twitter said entire communities were swept away. After rampaging through the Caribbean as one of the most powerful hurricanes ever recorded, Dorian wind speeds dropped on Tuesday to make it a Category 2 storm on the five-step Saffir-Simpson intensity scale. It maintained that level on Wednesday, but forecasters warned it was still dangerous.
Residents of coastal Florida, Georgia and South Carolina were bracing for Dorian's approach on Wednesday, with the National Hurricane Center warning the slow-moving storm could make landfall in South or North Carolina Thursday or Friday. More than a million people have been ordered to evacuate.

Dorian packed sustained winds of 105 miles per hour (165 kph) and was moving north-northwest at 8 mph, as it churned about 95 miles (155 km) east of Daytona Beach, Florida, the NHC said in an 8 a.m. EDT (1200 GMT) advisory. Hurricane-force winds had expanded to 60 miles (100 km) from the storm's core. Heavy rains and storm-surge waters moving inland could cause life-threatening flash floods, the NHC said. The risk extended from Jupiter, Florida., to Surf City, North Carolina. Tornadoes were possible along the Florida coast, with the risk later moving to Georgia and South Carolina.


FREEPORT: Debris left by Hurricane Dorian litters Grand Bahama International Airport. —AFP

Long lists of missing

With telephones down on Abaco and Grand Bahama islands, residents posted lists of missing loved ones across social media sites. A single Facebook post by media outlet Our News Bahamas seeking the names of missing people had 1,600 comments listing lost family members since it went live on Tuesday.


The exact toll in the Bahamas will not be clear until the storm passes and rescue crews are able to access devastated areas, said Theo Neilly, the Bahamian consul general in Washington. As many as 13,000 homes in the Bahamas may have been destroyed or severely damaged, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said, in the strongest storm to hit the Bahamas.


Josh Morgerman, who went to the Great Abaco Island on Aug. 31, said Dorian was the most intense storm he had experienced in three decades of chasing hurricanes. "Thought I was playing it safe by riding it out in a solid-concrete school on a hill in Marsh Harbour," he said on Twitter. "Thought wrong … Winds pounded the building with the force of a thousand sledgehammers."


When the storm's eye passed over the island, Morgerman said he fled to a better-built government building that he found filled with others who had escaped collapsed houses. Food may be required for 14,500 people in the northern Bahamas' Abaco Islands and for 45,700 people in Grand Bahama, the UN World Food Program said. The preliminary estimates were based on an assessment by representatives of Caribbean nations, the WFP and other groups.


The US Agency for International Development said on Twitter it was air-lifting critical relief items, such as plastic sheeting, hygiene kits, and water containers, from Miami to the Bahamas. The US Coast Guard said four of its helicopters were assisting in humanitarian efforts. Dorian, which killed one person in Puerto Rico before striking the Bahamas on Sunday, is tied for the second-strongest Atlantic storm to make landfall with Gilbert (1988), Wilma (2005) and the 1935 Labor Day hurricane. - AFP