Abaco concerns remain over burial

By TANYA SMITH-CARTWRIGHT

ts-cartwright@tribunemedia.net

DESPITE explanations from the Disaster Reconstruction Authority during a press Zoom conference on Sunday, some Abaco residents are still frustrated about the mass burial of Hurricane Dorian victims.

Fifty-five victims of the devastating storm were laid to rest by the DRA on Friday amid some protest. The mass burial, organised by the Bahamas Christian Council and the Funeral Directors Association, according to the DRA, took place in a public cemetery in Central Pines, Abaco. Many victims of the killer storm remain unaccounted for and only a handful of those buried have been positively identified by DNA so far.

Many Abaconians watched the press conference on Sunday and some seemed dissatisfied with what they heard.

“I watched the press conference and I don’t feel that this long, drawn out thing was necessary,” Michelle Oliver said.

“All of these police and coroner’s reports could have been done months ago. They were really not full reports. . .To me the big, empty multi-burial was unnecessary and so was the press conference. Is anything going to be better for us here in Abaco? I don’t think so.”

Some residents believe the handling of the burial service was impersonal.

Reese Burrows said: “Why should these people put together a service when the authority could have contacted the people whose relatives died themselves? Like they don’t want to speak to us? This is so impersonal. I was furious when she said that. That don’t even sound right. I have never seen a more heartless set of people like this government. Where did they come from?”

One official at the press conference said some of Friday’s protestors did not lose loved ones during the storm and suggested they had ulterior motives.

Resident Doreen Symonette said while that might be true, people on the island are just frustrated.

“. . .Where some of that might be true, the fact remains that we were very angry at having bodies here for months and nothing being able to identify our dead. We are also very mad at how that Disaster Authority is doing nothing for Abaco. When is Abaco going to stop looking like an atom bomb was dropped on it?”

One Abaconian saw a silver lining in what one could term a grim situation.

“I watched the press conference and with all that was said, I look at it as the first attempt at closure for us here in Abaco,” Lydia Sawyer said. “These bodies were here for many months and we complained about that. Now that they are buried, are we going to continue to complain? I feel, through the grace of God that those bodies, although committed to the earth, will soon be identified and we can go and visit the gravesites knowing exactly who is in them.”

The police are encouraging Abaconians to give blood and other samples of their DNA to assist with identifying those who were buried in Friday’s ceremony.

Comments

Hoda says...

I think this article is important, firstly, because it seems it is acknowledgment that some of the things said by the dra are true and that people didnt cate about the facts because these events were was rooted in emotion, trauma. No matter what the facts are ppl will be upset.

Posted 26 May 2020, 10:17 a.m. Suggest removal

DWW says...

shut up and have a sense of decorum

Posted 27 May 2020, 12:21 a.m. Suggest removal

Hoda says...

Please explain, so I can have some fun.

Posted 28 May 2020, 3:19 p.m. Suggest removal

stillwaters says...

Give the families the option of exhuming and reburial of family members once they identifications are done and normalcy has been established......at their expense, of course.They seem to need that closure and final time with their dead relatives.

Posted 26 May 2020, 3:23 p.m. Suggest removal

mandela says...

Nine months (270) days to identify 55 bodies, I thank God it wasn't 100 or more. Everyone that attends funerals doesn't have to be loved ones, there's also friends and persons for moral support, the official that suggested persons that weren't loved ones were only there with an ulterior motive is very D-Average and insensitive.

Posted 26 May 2020, 4:27 p.m. Suggest removal

stillwaters says...

Come on, be honest.....every Bahamian funeral and wedding have gawkers.

Posted 26 May 2020, 4:50 p.m. Suggest removal

The_Oracle says...

It probably was hundreds, but we will never know. It will be telling in year or so IF the 55 are ever identified to any major degree or %. At that time we should know how many more are still missing and not among the 55.
Maybe that's why they don't want the ID's known.

Posted 26 May 2020, 7:26 p.m. Suggest removal

DWW says...

I hope those most affected can start to feel some closure. being mad does not bring them back.

Posted 27 May 2020, 12:26 a.m. Suggest removal

geostorm says...

Being mad is a part of the grief process. Hopefully, they can move past that stage soon and accept that no matter what they do, their loved one will not be brought back.

No matter what the government did, to those who suffered the shock, devastation and death in the manner that Grand Bahamians and Abaconians did, nothing will be good enough. While in their grief, many will look to blame someone. This someone right now just happens to be the government..

Posted 27 May 2020, 5:05 a.m. Suggest removal

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