Caribbean-On-Line

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Search for
 

Travel Insurance

Geat a FREE, no obligation quote for travel insurance - click here!

Trip Advisor
Read Caribbean Hotel reviews at TripAdvisor

col hurricane blog

AddThis Feed Button

email notifications

Enter your email address to add or remove yourself from our notification list:

 
 

recent entries

caribbean-on-line

Caribbean Travel & Life
FREE ISSUE!
Caribbean Travel & Life Magazine

West Indies Maps
Tourist Islands of
the West Indies
$12.95


Fodor's Caribbean 2007

hurricane blog archives

caribbean-on-line   hurricane blog

TROPICAL DEPRESSION OLGA ADVISORY NUMBER 9 | Main | 2008 Atlantic Hurricane Names

December 14, 2007

25 Dead in Caribbean Tropical Storm Olga

SANTIAGO, Dominican Republic (AP) — Dominican authorities reported 11 more deaths Thursday from Tropical Storm Olga, raising to 25 the death toll across the Caribbean from the second devastating storm to hit the island of Hispaniola in as many months. The vast majority were killed in the central Dominican province of Santiago after officials, fearing a collapse of a dam, ordered the release of billions of gallons of water into the Yaque River and inundated seven towns along the waterway's path. "We knew the damage we were going to cause below. We did not want to, but we had to," Octavio Rodriguez, a member of the committee that decided to open the floodgates, told The Associated Press. Furious residents said they were warned just minutes before waves as high as a two-story building came crashing down the river, sweeping away cars and sending plumes of mud careening into houses. "They warned us but there was no time ... everybody was sleeping," said 50-year-old Sonia Duran Maldonado, her voice shaking. "They must beg our forgiveness for what has happened." Officials explained Wednesday that as heavy rains overwhelmed the Tavera Dam near Santiago, the country's second-largest city, they decided to release water to prevent an outright collapse. By midnight Tuesday all the dam's doors were open and 1.6 million gallons were pouring through every second.

More here.

Comments

Post a comment




Remember Me?

Verification (to reduce spam comments):

(you may use HTML tags for style)


Search for

About Us | Advertising | FAQ | Feedback | What's New? | Privacy Policy | © 1995 - 2008 Caribbean-On-Line