Anger at lack of Dorian answers

By JADE RUSSELL

Tribune Staff Reporter

jrussell@tribunemedia.net

THE revelation that the Davis administration will not launch a formal inquiry into Hurricane Dorian-related deaths reopened the wounds Sitha Silien has suffered since the category five storm swept through Abaco, taking her mother, brother, and cousin.

She and other Abaco residents yesterday lamented what they see as a minimal effort by the state to help them get closure and answers to critical questions.

Prime Minister Philip “Brave” Davis said on Tuesday that investigations into Dorian-related deaths are ongoing “administratively” to inform future actions. He said his administration decided against a formal inquiry despite his suggestion in opposition for an independent investigation either by external police or a commission of inquiry into the fate of those still missing in Abaco and Grand Bahama after the hurricane.

Yesterday, the Office of the Prime Minister’s communications officials did not respond to The Tribune’s requests for details on the administrative efforts to which Mr Davis referred.

Ms Silien, who lived in the Mudd shanty town during Dorian in 2019, said her mother died when a piece of plywood struck her as the storm intensified. She said her brother was killed when the roof of a church collapsed on him, and her cousin has been missing since the storm.

She said she had endured a five-year battle to obtain death certificates for her loved ones. She said the Coroner’s Court has yet to declare them dead, and now the lack of a formal inquiry has added to her grief.

“I’m being cut again,” she cried out. “It’s not fair.”

“They keep telling me to wait, and I’m right here waiting. If the government knew they couldn’t bury my people, I asked to bury them myself, but they refused to release the bodies to me.”

Roscoe Thompson, chairman of the Marsh Harbour/Spring City Township, criticised government’s decision not to open a formal inquiry.

“People have a right to know the death toll from Dorian,” he said. “Why wouldn’t they hold a formal inquiry? Are they satisfied with the numbers?”

While he acknowledged it would be difficult to determine the exact number of people –– especially undocumented immigrants –– who died in the storm, Mr Thompson estimated The Mudd shanty town housed between 6,000 and 8,000 people, only half of whom evacuated in time. He believes over 1,000 people died during Dorian and spoke of personally seeing 17 dead bodies in the storm’s aftermath.

Octervil Baptise, president of the Haitian Pastors Association in Abaco, also believes more Haitians and Bahamians died in the Mudd than has been reported. He said he often sees grieving families expressing their frustrations on social media because they still don’t have the closure they need.

Faron Newbold, chief councillor for Central Abaco’s district council, said some grieving families have struggled to claim life insurance benefits after relatives died in Dorian. Insurance companies often require proof of death, but in cases like Dorian, where people remain unaccounted for, families may face challenges obtaining death certificates to process claims.

In June 2020, then National Security Minister Marvin Dames reported 279 people were missing after Dorian, while then Assistant Commissioner of Police Solomon Cash said only 33 remained unaccounted for.

After recovering the remains of three unidentified bodies in February 2020, the now-defunct National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) reported a death toll of 74.

 

Comments

birdiestrachan says...

Mr Davis is correct what will be accomplished? Abaco and GB was under the threat of another Hurricane ,no Hurricane is alike they are all different but people have gone to shelters and the roofs blew off, People are told to move many of them do not, Hurricanes are expensive and many look to the government for relief, Dorian has been long gone thank God and pray that hundreds of years will pass before any Dorian occur again,

Posted 10 October 2024, 12:43 p.m. Suggest removal

FreeportFreddy says...

Typical PLP answer as they do not understand the issue.

The issue is how survivors are having HUGE problems moving on because the people are gone BUT they can't get a Death Certificate (so no access to bank, insurance payments, government programs, etc.). They have to wait for 7 years.

The other issue is the number of dead and RESPECT for them whether they are documented people or not they are people!

Posted 10 October 2024, 1:50 p.m. Suggest removal

DWW says...

the law 7 years without a body. we cant change a law just willy nilly to suit one circumstance. it is all related to insurance and bank accounts being frozen...

Posted 11 October 2024, 7:17 a.m. Suggest removal

CaptainCoon says...

That's complete nonsense. governments change laws willy nilly all the time for their agendas and special interests.

Stop the cap old man!
SAD!

Posted 11 October 2024, 1:12 p.m. Suggest removal

Porcupine says...

birdie,
You are a certifiable idiot. No apologies. An idiot.

Posted 11 October 2024, 7:25 a.m. Suggest removal

ExposedU2C says...

@birdie says the same thing about investigating any type of corruption, fraud or outright theft committed by cabinet members, other senior government officials and their cronies in the private sector.

Brain-dead @birdie believes nothing will be accomplished by investigating anything that has occurred in the past and that there are no lessons to be learned or corrective measures taken to help avoid repeating past pitfalls.

Yup, @birdie sure does lend new meaning to the term "propagandist moron" with each and every new post to this website.

Posted 11 October 2024, 10:39 a.m. Suggest removal

CaptainCoon says...

How much do you get paid to tell lies for the PLP?

Posted 11 October 2024, 1:13 p.m. Suggest removal

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