

Authorities have reported
2,500 people missing in the Bahamas in the aftermath of Hurricane Dorian.
Carl Smith, the National
Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) spokesman, said at a news conference that
the death toll is expected to “significantly rise”.
However, the list, based on
missing person’s reports, had not been checked against government records of
people evacuated or staying in shelters,
“The database’s processing
is underway,’’ Smith said, adding that the number of missing was expected to
decrease.
Bahamian Prime Minister
Hubert Minnis warned that while the official death toll stood at 50, “the
number of deaths is expected to significantly increase’’.
“We are ramping up efforts
to collect those who died in the storm,’’ Minnis added in a televised address,
calling Dorian a “historic tragedy”.
The Prime Minister said
that more than 5,500 people had been evacuated to the island of New Providence
to date, adding that “commercial carriers will be allowed to resume flights to
Abaco starting today on a limited basis’’.
The storm, which made its
first landfall on the Caribbean archipelago on Sept. 1, levelled entire
neighbourhoods, with Grand Bahama and Abaco Islands worst hit.
“Much of Abaco, as we knew
it, is decimated and no longer exists. Floodwaters in the streets made them
appear like the ocean. Concrete structures were turned to dust as if a massive
bomb had exploded with atomic force,’’ Minnis said.
“East Grand Bahama has been
laid to waste. Freeport, West End and much of Grand Bahama experienced horrible
destruction; no living Bahamian has seen anything like this in their lifetime,
’’Minnis added.
The hurricane was a
Category 5 storm – the strongest – when it made landfall on the Abaco Islands.
It then moved towards the U.S., making landfall a second time as a Category 1
storm in North Carolina before hitting Canada.
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