Felix Aftermath
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- cycloneye
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Re: Felix Aftermath=100 dead-Hundreds are missing
I haved been looking for information from the interior areas but without luck.All is about the coastal areas of Sandy Bay,Puerto Cabezas,the acuatic cemetary etc.Lets see if information from the interior comes later today.
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- Fego
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Re: Felix Aftermath Thread
They are talking between 200 and 3,000 deads. I think that 200 is more realistic... but..




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Re: Felix Aftermath Thread
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- cycloneye
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http://www.elnuevodiario.com.ni/2007/09 ... ales/58343
U.S helicopters haved seen many bodies in the water floating but no numberrs were said.Also Daniel Ortega says that the death count will be stopped until the goverment authorities can do the coundown.He says the media is spreading many numbers and to avoid confusion,from now on the numbers are going to come out very slow.
U.S helicopters haved seen many bodies in the water floating but no numberrs were said.Also Daniel Ortega says that the death count will be stopped until the goverment authorities can do the coundown.He says the media is spreading many numbers and to avoid confusion,from now on the numbers are going to come out very slow.
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- Dionne
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Re:
cycloneye wrote:http://www.elnuevodiario.com.ni/2007/09/07/nacionales/58343
U.S helicopters haved seen many bodies in the water floating but no numberrs were said.Also Daniel Ortega says that the death count will be stopped until the goverment authorities can do the coundown.He says the media is spreading many numbers and to avoid confusion,from now on the numbers are going to come out very slow.
The numbers are already coming out slowly. We may never get a truthful count. Given the geography of the land it might be impossible to ever get a true count.
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- cycloneye
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Re: Felix Aftermath
You are right about that.We may never see a final count as many were washed away.
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Re: Felix Aftermath
HurricaneBill wrote:Miskito Indians Vent Anger Over Felix
IMO, their own bloody fault for not leaving. I have little sympathy if they refused to leave. If they *COULDN'T* leave it's a different story, but many of them *REFUSED* to.
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Re: Felix Aftermath
HurricaneBill wrote:Miskito Indians Vent Anger Over Felix
That's not good news. If Nicaragua purportedly isn't doing enough to search for survivors, then the death toll is likely still climbing as we speak, as injured survivors die as they are without aid.
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- Dionne
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Re: Felix Aftermath
Chacor wrote:HurricaneBill wrote:Miskito Indians Vent Anger Over Felix
IMO, their own bloody fault for not leaving. I have little sympathy if they refused to leave. If they *COULDN'T* leave it's a different story, but many of them *REFUSED* to.
The quoted text said nothing about refusal to leave. It did mention that there was very little advanced warning. Kinda hard to outrun a cat 5 in a canoe. Hell, I wasn't able to outrun a land falling cat 3 in a car here in the states. Have some compassion man!
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I have also seen that most refused to leave. That is typical for Nicaragua... there were issues with the evacuations during Joan in 1988
The best way would be forced evacuations. Do not give the people the choice to stay and use all means necessary to ensure that they leave. For a long time, nobody died in the tidal surge... now, it's starting to become like the 1950s, because people are ignoring evacuation orders
If you stay on the coast in a cat 4 or 5, you are likely going to die
The best way would be forced evacuations. Do not give the people the choice to stay and use all means necessary to ensure that they leave. For a long time, nobody died in the tidal surge... now, it's starting to become like the 1950s, because people are ignoring evacuation orders
If you stay on the coast in a cat 4 or 5, you are likely going to die
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Derek Ortt wrote:I have also seen that most refused to leave. That is typical for Nicaragua... there were issues with the evacuations during Joan in 1988
The best way would be forced evacuations. Do not give the people the choice to stay and use all means necessary to ensure that they leave. For a long time, nobody died in the tidal surge... now, it's starting to become like the 1950s, because people are ignoring evacuation orders
If you stay on the coast in a cat 4 or 5, you are likely going to die
I agree, it's necessary, but unfortunately Nicaragua just doesn't have the resources to perform something like that. It's sad but true.
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- wxmann_91
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Here's some news about the Nicaragua interior:
Source: http://www.usatoday.com/weather/storms/ ... elix_N.htm
Nicaragua says 300 families trapped in mountains after Hurricane Felix
MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) — At least 300 families in Nicaragua's remote northern mountains have been cut off from the rest of the country since Hurricane Felix destroyed all roads into their communities, government officials said Sunday.
Word reached the capital after several villagers hiked three days through forests and over mountains to find help, the civil protection agency said in a news release.
Trapped residents in three communities near the city of Bonanza, about 280 kilometers (180 miles) north of the capital of Managua, are in need of food, water, medicine, clothing and blankets, according to the villagers, who also told authorities that many children are ill.
Bonanza Mayor Manuel Sevilla told Channel 8 television Sunday that the hurricane had ruined crops of bananas, citrus, corn and rice in the region. He asked the government to deliver aid by helicopter.
Felix devastated remote jungle beaches and communities along the Moskito coastline last Tuesday when it struck as a Category 5 hurricane, tearing down homes and killing scores of people.
FIND MORE STORIES IN: Nicaragua | Felix | MANAGUA | Bonanza
Estimates of the storm's death toll have ranged from 49 to more than 100, but no one has been able to tally the missing.
Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Source: http://www.usatoday.com/weather/storms/ ... elix_N.htm
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