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STRICKEN INDIES.

HURRICANE HORRORS.

Number of Fatalities May Reach

Five Thousand.

DREADFUL CONDITIONS.

(United P.A.—Electric Telegraph—Copyright)

WASHINGTON, September 7.

Messages i'roni Santo Domingo state that the hurricane caused at least 4000 deaths, and it in feared that the number will reach 5000.

Only 400 of the 10,000 houses m the city were left standing and many thousands of people are homeless. The dead are being extricated rapidly. Thirty per cent of more than 5000 people injured are expected to die.

Fifty mothers and their new-born infants were killed through the collapse of a maternity home-. Many people' were decapitated by sheets of zinc, with which the buildings were lined.

A United States marine officer said it was as if a giant hand had smashed the city like a toy and then stirred the pieces with a stick. There is no water lit to drink, as the waterworks were demolished and the river is a sea of mud.

Floods have washed out newly-buried dead and coffins arc floating around like corks. The dead arc being collected in heaps and burned with wreckage, as the authorities otherwise feared a plague.

Concrete cisterns are being used as funeral pyres, where as many as 50 bodies at a time are being cremated. The wrecked city yesterday was enveloped in smoke from these funeral pyres.

The damage to property is now estimated at between £8,000,000 and £10,000,000.

Hour by hour the horror grows as refugees continue to drift in from outlying towns, bringing new tales of death and destruction.

Along the muddy streets of the city proper and the banks of the River Ozama the dead ' still lie in piles—a menace to the health of the community. All the available houses, churches and hospitals are filled with injured people.

The city is still without light or power. A squadron of six Cuban aeroplanes bearing physicians ami medical supplies landed yesterday morning and a ship arrived with food and medical supplies. Their arrival brought new hope to the little body of local officials, who have worked without rest.

A Desolate State. Parties have penetrated an area of 15 miles on every side of Santo Domingo. They report that all is a state of desolation.

The injured in outlying sections, owing to the impassability of the roads, have little hope of receiving aid for days. The storm destroyed great stores of coffee, sugar, cocoa and fruits which had been prepared, for export.

Among the buildings left is the 400-year-old cathedral containing the reputed tomb of Christopher Columbus. Interior towns did not suffer as much as the capital.

Relief is oeing dispatched to all points as quickly as possible.

capital is still isolated on the land side by Hoods, fallen trees and wrecked bridges. Electric and water plants are down and not functioning.

The Dominican Government is organising mobile kitchens to feed the thousands of homeless peofl . Haiti is sending relief by motor lorries overland, but it is feared the impassable roads may prevent their arrival.

The Cuban Government not only sent eight physicians by aeroplane, but ordered the cruiser Patria to proceed to Santo Domingo immediately with food and medicines.

The American Red Cross Society has contributed £10,000 toward the rehabilitation of the stricken areas, and much more is expected from private sources.

The United States marine commander in Haiti lias asked the .Santo Domingo Government to prepare a landing-place, as lie is planning to establish a regular aeroplane transportation service to carry necessary supplies.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19300908.2.76

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume LXI, Issue 212, 8 September 1930, Page 7

Word Count
578

STRICKEN INDIES. Auckland Star, Volume LXI, Issue 212, 8 September 1930, Page 7

STRICKEN INDIES. Auckland Star, Volume LXI, Issue 212, 8 September 1930, Page 7