Storm poses deadly flooding risk to Haiti – U.N.

PORT-AU-PRINCE, (Reuters) – A tropical cyclone  barreling toward Haiti threatens hundreds of thousands with  deadly floodwaters and will likely worsen a cholera epidemic  that has already killed more than 440 people, the United  Nations said yesterday.

Tropical Storm Tomas is expected to hit Haiti on Friday,  unleashing torrential rains and a storm surge of up to 6 to 9  feet (2-3 metres) that will put 1.5 million people at risk,  said Nigel Fisher, the U.N. humanitarian coordinator in Haiti,  citing government estimates.

“The biggest fear is people being caught by high waters and  the potential spread of cholera,” Fisher said in an interview.  “People should (not) be under the misapprehension that it (the  epidemic) is under control. The cholera epidemic is likely to  spread.”

The outbreak of the diarrheal disease, which has taken 442  lives, has triggered another national emergency in the Western  Hemisphere’s poorest nation.

It came as the deforested and mountainous land, which is  very vulnerable to flash floods and mudslides, was still  struggling to recover from a Jan. 12 earthquake that killed  more than a quarter of a million people and left about 1.3  million quake survivors still living in fragile outdoor camps.

Tomas has a terrifying potential to add to the country’s  misery. It hit the Caribbean’s eastern islands as a hurricane  four days ago, killing at least five people in St. Lucia before  weakening. It is seen gathering force again to start battering  Haiti and Jamaica from Thursday night, forecasters said.

“Hurricanes never come at a good time but we are  particularly stretched right now,” Fisher said.
The worst fear is a hurricane-strength storm that hits  multiple regions simultaneously, overwhelming the capacity of  the government and the aid community to cope, he said.

“The big challenge is saving lives. If the hurricane is so  huge that all over the country is hit severely … we will  really be stretched and we will have to make difficult choices  about where to put scarce assets,” he added.

Tomas restrengthened to a tropical storm yesterday,  packing top sustained winds of 45 miles per hour (75 kph) and  moving northwestward. Its core was expected to approach Haiti  tomorrow, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said.

“Tomas could be approaching hurricane strength as the  center nears Haiti,” the Miami-based hurricane center said.

Yesterday afternoon, the storm was about 305 miles (490  km) southwest of Port-au-Prince.
In Jamaica, which is also expected to feel the effects of  Tomas, authorities were preparing shelters and urging people to  evacuate from low-lying and flood-prone areas.

In Haiti, the government is urging people in low-lying  areas to start a voluntary evacuation to higher ground if they  can stay with friends or family or in community shelters.

But government capacity to speed an evacuation is limited  and leaving will be difficult for hundreds of thousands in  cramped tent cities and makeshift camps in the capital. Fisher said up to half would not be able to find shelter  with friends or relatives.

“We are in month nine of responding to people with needs in  camps because of the earthquake. We have just had to mobilize a  lot of people and resources … to respond to cholera,” he  said, adding the United Nations immediately needed about  150,000 tents and tarpaulins to provide additional shelter.

With the storm threat and the spreading epidemic, Haiti  faces major disruption less than a month before Nov. 28      presidential and legislative elections. Electoral officials  have not moved to postpone the vote.

Jocelyne Pierre Louis, director of the government’s family  health department, said on Wednesday that more than 6,700  people had been hospitalized with cholera. The vast majority of  the dead, 336, were from the central Artibonite region, she  said.