Cabaret ravaged by
massive flooding - Stephanie Debere
Source: Oxfam GB - UK
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“I woke up when my bed
started to move,” says 68-year-old Raoul Toussaint. “Water was already rushing through my room, and I was swept away until I managed to grab a tree half a kilometre away. It was 2am on
Sunday morning, and I had to hang on until the water calmed down at 6am.”
As I try to imagine the
terror of raging waters and darkness, Raoul surveys the foundations of his stonewalled house - all that remained when he got home. “Everything’s gone: all my savings, clothes and
possessions,” he shrugs. The floods caused by Hurricane Ike swept everything away.I meet Raoul in Cabaret, 35 km north of Haiti’s capital, Port-au-Prince. Both the town’s
rivers burst their banks during Ike’s onslaught. Over 60 people died. Among the heaps of debris, mud and vegetation that fill the streets, residents have found the bodies of people they
don’t know, swept down from other areas. Raoul’s neighbour Sauveur Jean Louis joins us, bandaged and speaking in a hoarse whisper. His home was also swept away, his six-year-old daughter
Kriscarlene killed.
Walking streets that resemble battle zones, we find Marie Agenor mopping
wet mud from her porch. Her front wall was toppled by the passing torrent and she points to marks inside her house left by a metre of water and a shin-high deposit of mud.“We were
sleeping when a neighbour yelled to gather our belongings and run, but there was no time. We just had to climb onto a roof in the clothes we slept in and wait until morning. The water swept everything
away: our clothes, the children’s new schoolbooks. My business is ruined. I used to sell cold drinks and food, but my fridge and stock have all gone, and my money too. I don’t have any
capital to restart it again.”
Shocks
like this are bad enough when you have insurance and strong state support, but without either, Raoul, Marie and their communities can only rely on the kindness of friends. They’re sleeping with
relatives or in nearby schools and they don’t know how they’ll rebuild their lives. And this is just a fraction of Haiti’s current hurricane damage.I’m glad to see two
Oxfam trucks arrive with a supply of 1,000 five-gallon water bottles and additional support for the municipal disaster risk reduction committee which Oxfam helped to create, train, and equip for
situations such as this.Heading out of town, we pass a large funeral crowd dressed in black, then a plantation of bananas, the area’s key crop. Through the shiny green field, the floods
have cut a broad swathe of destruction, brown and flat, where only feathery stumps remain. Behind rise steep green mountains. At a casual glance, it looks as if their folds are filled with snow, but
the white scars in the hillsides are bare sand.“They’re caused by water erosion,” explains Oxfam Project Officer Olbert Nicolas. “Seventy-two per cent of Haiti’s
energy needs come from charcoal. Less than two per cent of our forests remain, so rainwater races down the mountains causing flooding and washing the fertile topsoil away. ”The
hurricanes deepen Haiti’s other crisis: the devastating effects of the rise in world food prices. People literally can’t afford to eat, and the destruction of crops by Ike and his
predecessors is only going to make their hunger worse.
More from the Oxfam Press Office at http://www.oxfam.org.uk/news
Raoul Toussaint. Photo by Diana Hernandez Cordero.
More from the Oxfam Press Office at http://www.oxfam.org.uk/news
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