In The News |
Article:
Signs Of The
Last Times "People did not expect the damage Matthew caused. People were not ready. It's breathtaking and devastating," said Ruth Augustin, a nurse based in Haiti's capital of Port-au-Prince. The Category 4 storm, the worst to hit the region in a decade, flattened tens of thousands of houses on the island, where even before the storm thousands of people had remained living in tents in the aftermath of a devastating earthquake in 2010. The storm wiped out up to 80 percent of crops in some areas, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said, placing pressure on food resources and forecasting low exports for the Western Hemisphere’s poorest country, whose economy is heavily dependent on agriculture. As a result, the UN expects many of Haiti's rural residents to migrate into city slums bringing with them a likely resurgence of cholera amid deteriorating sanitary conditions. The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) expect that half of Haiti’s population of 11 million people have been impacted by the storm, with at least 350,000 people in need of immediate assistance.
Read Full Article ....