Sunday, September 7, 2008
Cabaret, Haiti Hit Hard By Ike; Bodies On Every Street Corner
Frantz Samedi grieves with his lifeless 5-year-old daughter Tamasha Jean in his arms. Tamasha died as she was swept away by floods from Hurricane Ike.
By JACQUELINE CHARLES
jcharles@MiamiHerald.com
CABARET, HAITI --
In this tiny Haitian town flooded by Hurricane Ike, the grim reality set in Sunday morning as the bodies of a dozen children lay dead on a concrete slab.
Mothers wailed, fathers screamed, an entire town was shaken as they tried to count the dead - many of them children and old women swept up by the river. So far, 22 are believed to have died, but the number would likely rise.
A Miami Herald reporter, the only international journalist in the town north of Port-au-Prince, witnessed the horror.
''With the others we lost houses, we lost animals and we lost plantations. Never bodies,'' said Lisemene Ferry Raphael, 46, standing across from her dead 12-year-old god daughter.
There are bodies on almost every other corner inside the town, where two rivers and the torrential rain of Ike swallowed houses and plantations, and swept children and old women downstream.
[caption id="" align="alignright" width="320" caption="A man walks through flood waters as he pulls a wheelbarrow loaded with a coffin containing the body of a man who died from hypertension triggered during flooding after Tropical Storm Hanna hit the area in Gonaives, Saturday, Sept. 6, 2008. Hanna has killed 166 people in Haiti. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos)"][/caption]
Cabaret sits along Route 1 on the road to the city of Gonaives.
The heavy rains moved into the region at 2 a.m.
Within 20 minutes, water came barreling through the door of Franzt Samedi's home, where his 5-year-old adopted daughter, Tamesha Jean, lay asleep.
A 60-year-old cousin yanked the girl from her bed and tried running toward higher ground.
But he fell, and lost his hold of the girl, the fierce water pulling her away.
Samedi spent hours walking through the town, searching for his missing daughter.
He looked at the bank of the river, under fallen trees, everywhere.
But she was nowhere to be found.
Then, a neighbor spotted her -- laying dead on a concrete slab near a motorcycle shop.
''I'm the one who she calls Papa. I'm the one who is responsible for her. If she were with me she would not have died,'' Samedi said.
Distraught, Samedi kneeled at his daughter's side.
He pulled off Tamesha's shirt and, with a bucket of Culligan drinking water and a sponge, he began wiping her lifeless body.
Then, as she was taken away in the back of a truck, he hollered, ``I would have rather died.''
Source: Topix.Com - ABC.Com - MiamiHerald.Com
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Haiti
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