Cholera deaths in hard-hit Haiti city add to toll

PORT-AU-PRINCE,  (Reuters) – A three-week-old cholera  epidemic that has killed more than 640 people in Haiti is  spreading quickly in the northwest coastal city of Gonaives,  authorities said yesterday.

Pierrelus Saint-Justin, the mayor of Gonaives, said he  personally buried 31 people on Tuesday and had another 15  bodies in a truck waiting for burial.

“Others should be dying as we speak,” Saint-Justin told  Reuters in a telephone interview.
“Since Nov. 5 until today, we  have buried at least 70 people and that is only in the downtown  area of Gonaives.

There are more people who died in rural areas  surrounding Gonaives.”
The city is no stranger to tragedy, since much of it was  encased in mud by hurricanes and tropical storms that killed  several thousand people in 2004 and 2008.

But Saint-Justin said the situation was once again “getting  catastrophic” in Gonaives, possibly worsened by flooding from  Hurricane Tomas earlier this month.
“We are calling on all those who can come to help,” he  said.
“The hospitals are full. We are overwhelmed.”

It was not clear how many of the Gonaives deaths were  included in the most recent figures issued by Haiti’s health  ministry, which said cholera had killed 648 people in the  Caribbean country and sickened 9,971 up to Nov. 8. Radio reports from across the poorest nation in the  Americas indicate the death toll could easily exceed 700 people  when updated figures are released on Friday.

Cholera, a diarrheal disease transmitted by contaminated  water, has mostly hit Haiti’s rural central regions so far. But  authorities say it has now gained a foothold in Port-au-Prince  and is menacing crowded slum areas of the capital.

Among the most vulnerable areas are tent and tarpaulin  camps in Port-au-Prince still housing more than 1.3 million  survivors of Haiti’s devastating Jan. 12 earthquake.