Thursday, April 15, 2021
By RASHAD ROLLE
Tribune Senior Reporter
rrolle@tribunemedia.net
TWO strangers united in grief yesterday while testifying about the fate of their spouses during a Coroner’s Court inquest into the presumed deaths of people reported missing after Hurricane Dorian.
Jason Farquharson said he searched seven days for his wife before learning that storm surges destroyed her house balcony and plunged her into the sea.
Tervilla Caintil, meanwhile, broke into tears and said she walked among dead bodies in the Pigeon Peas before finding the lifeless body of her husband, Emmanuel Caintil.
Nineteen months after the monster storm struck Abaco and Grand Bahama, the long-awaited inquest is an effort to answer questions about the circumstances surrounding the presumed deaths of at least 34 missing people and to bring some official closure to family members concerning their deaths.
When Hurricane Dorian struck the Bahamas in September 2019, Mr Farquharson lived in New Providence while his wife, Kathleen, lived with her son in Abaco.
Mr Farquharson said he couldn’t reach his wife on September 1, 2019 and didn’t reach anyone from Abaco until they arrived to New Providence seven days later.
He said his stepson, Kahlel Smith, 19, eventually contacted his brother-in-law, who later informed him that his wife “did not make it”.
Recounting the story as told to him by Mr Smith, Mr Farquharson said when his wife and stepson opened the door of their home to people seeking shelter, the wind tore down the door hinges and blew the door away.
“They tried to block the door entrance but the winds were too strong and they started feeling the roof shaking. He told his mum to put on her tennis (shoes) and they put a blanket around her and they went on the balcony,” he said.
Mr Farquharson said storm surges caused the pair to fall into the water shortly afterwards as the balcony collapsed.
Mr Smith, he said, struggled to remain above the water and eventually clung to a pole on which he blacked out “for a few minutes.”
Upon regaining consciousnesses, Mr Smith saw his mother’s tennis shoes and swam toward her. He tried turning around her body, which was face down in the water, and sought help from people on a nearby boat. When he failed to get their attention, he swam to their boat and remained there until the storm passed. He never saw his mother’s body again.
Mr Farquharson said his wife could not swim. He speculated that she drowned.
Though DNA swabs were taken from Mr Smith, no match was found.
For her part, Mrs Caintil testified that her husband did not heed her warning to evacuate the Pigeon Peas along with her and their son.
She said she left him in the shantytown and went to Murphy Town the day before the storm struck and stayed with her cousin. Her experience there was harrowing, she said, because their house collapsed.
She said she walked among dead people while searching for her husband in the Pigeon Peas the day after the storm.
Three days after the storm passed, she said a man named Ricky told her a dead body was near his car and that he called officials to remove the body.
She said: “I ran to go look, I saw it was my husband. After that immigration came for him. They put him in a bag, zipped it up and carried him.”
She said although officials removed her husband’s body, DNA swabs from her son have not returned a match.
Comments
Sickened says...
Sorry but what is this inquest about? Is it so that missing persons can finally be declared dead by the Coroner?
Posted 15 April 2021, 9:39 a.m. Suggest removal
tribanon says...
The Tribune's mischief in stirring up emotions for advertising revenue knows no bounds. Their reporting should not be focused on this kind of low-cost court room coverage, but rather on what has the Minnis administration done to help prepare our country for the next Dorian-type hurricane knowing that another hurricane season is not far off.
Posted 15 April 2021, 10:39 a.m. Suggest removal
DDK says...
Obviously. SOOOO devious.
Posted 15 April 2021, 2:09 p.m. Suggest removal
DDK says...
That said, such loss of life and home was absolutely horrifying and devastating and very terrible for ANYBODY from ANY country....
Posted 15 April 2021, 3:49 p.m. Suggest removal
FreeUs242 says...
Ppl still living hungry on the streets after Dorian, are they receiving any benefits of surviving? Thank God for those ppl who donated to the ppl of Abaco. The GOVERNMENT is too busy raking in big paychecks from the poor.
Posted 15 April 2021, 11:12 a.m. Suggest removal
BahamaRed says...
Not being shady, but what if that wasn't the man's son, could be why no DNA match came back. #ijs #sorry
I do hope they bring closure for these families soon.
Posted 15 April 2021, 4:53 p.m. Suggest removal
John says...
You are being shady, prejudiced and totally disrespectful but that is you! If you had been following the story, there was some issues with the first set of DNA samples and the lab that was processing them. Then because there was a lot of decay and possible cross contamination of the bodies that were stored in the trailer, the second samples could not be reliably processed. And hence the mass burial.
Posted 15 April 2021, 6:25 p.m. Suggest removal
TalRussell says...
**Well, if be measured by the governance arrogances of continuing to encourage tourism businesses to return operate as usual** - the unbearable price goin' pale when weighed against the toughest experiences years gone by, by those long alive, today.
**How possible is it be seeing** the realm's currency being reduced valued measured by the size the wheel barrel load banknotes will take just pay a month's BPL electricity bill or but a quarter full **buggy** load of Comrade Grocer Rupert's, **No refrigeration required** off his stores' shelves foodstuffs?
Posted 15 April 2021, 7:02 p.m. Suggest removal
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