UPDATED ON:
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2007
2:56 MECCA TIME, 23:56 GMT
 
NEWS AMERICAS
Villagers die in Haiti floods
Cabaret was badly hit by torrential rain and the
death toll is expected to rise [AFP]
At least 23 people have been killed in flooding at a village in Haiti in the wake of torrential rain, a government official has said.
 
The deaths on Thursday in Cabaret, about 30 km north of the capital Port-au-Prince, brought the death toll from floods and mudslides across the country to at least 31 in the last two weeks.
"In the Cabaret area alone, 23 people are confirmed dead but there could be more and we are still in the process of assessing the situation," Paul Antoine Bien-Aime, Haiti's interior minister, said on Friday.
No respite
 
Bien-Aime said emergency supplies were being sent to Cabaret, where at least 1,000 people have been made homeless.
 
Meterologists said heavy rain was set to continue across Haiti and its neighbours for the foreseeable future.
 
In eastern Cuba, west of Haiti, more than 18,000 people have been evacuated amid concerns of flooding.
 
Due to deforestation, Haiti is more vulnerable to deadly floods than countries such as Cuba and Jamaica, which have also been swept by torrential rain recently.
 
About 90 per cent of Haiti's forests have been cleared, mostly to make charcoal for cooking.
 
In 2004, flooding triggered by the passage of tropical storm Jeanne,  killed about 3,000 people in Haiti's port city of Gonaives.
Source: Agencies
Tools:
Send  Email article
Print  Print article
 Send your feedback
Top news
Lebanon opposition gains ground
Timeline: Crisis in Lebanon
Who's who in Lebanese politics
Lebanon unrest: Insiders' views
Pro-West bloc claims Serbia win
AMERICAS news
Storms batter three US states
Obama leads superdelegate race
Mexico drug wars claim new victim
US 'authenticates' Chavez-Farc ties
Bolivia to vote on president's rule