Haiti earthquake death toll jumps to 724 people as STORM expected to hit devastated Caribbean country
August 15, 2021
Officials have raised the death toll from a devastating earthquake in Haiti to 724, with thousands more injured. Reeling from the quake, the Caribbean country is now bracing itself for a tropical storm.
Haiti’s civil protection agency raised the death toll on Sunday morning, a day after the country was shaken by a magnitude-7.2 earthquake. The quake struck the island nation’s southern peninsula, collapsing buildings in several towns and leaving streets strewn with rubble.
ðŸ‡ðŸ‡¹ Agence France-Presse: Haiti: the provisional toll of the earthquake reached 724 dead "500 in the south, 100 in Grand'Anse, 122 in Nippes and 2 in the North-West", according to the press release, which also reports more than 2,800 wounded. https://t.co/XciiVpCVRr
A government press release noted that 500 people had been killed in the south of the country – 100 in the area of Grand-Anse, 122 in the town of Nippes, and two in the northwest – and that more than 2,800 people had been injured.
Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry has declared a month-long state of emergency, and US President Joe Biden has charged USAID Administrator Samantha Power with leading the American response to the disaster. However, relief may be some time off yet, as Tropical Storm Grace bears down on the impoverished and tragedy-stricken nation.
Here are the 11 AM AST Sunday, August 15 Key Messages for Tropical Storm #Grace. Flooding is possible over the Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic, and Haiti over the next few days.https://t.co/zcPGK93qRFpic.twitter.com/nCIx4QbFxk
The storm is currently moving northwest from near Puerto Rico, and is expected to affect Haiti and the Dominican Republic by Monday or Tuesday. With wind speeds currently sitting around 40 mph (64km/h), Grace could dump up to 10 inches of rainfall on Haiti, according to the US National Hurricane Center.
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