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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
In hurricane-hit Mexico Beach, a marathon clean-up begins
By Cyril JULIEN
Mexico Beach , Etats-Unis (AFP) Oct 12, 2018

Grim search underway for victims of Hurricane Michael
Mexico Beach, United States (AFP) Oct 12, 2018 - Rescue teams using sniffer dogs carried out a grim search for victims of Hurricane Michael on Friday amid fears that the death toll from the monster storm -- which currently stands at 11 -- could rise.

"When you have that type of damage it takes some time to get in and actually go through and do the search and rescue," said Brock Long, head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).

"We hope to have 100 percent of the initial search and rescue done in Florida today," Long told reporters.

The Florida Panhandle town of Mexico Beach was pulverized by the Category 4 storm which crashed ashore on Wednesday, razing many homes to their foundations with 155 miles per hour (250 kph) winds and several feet of storm surge.

A mandatory evacuation was issued for the town of 1,000 on the Gulf of Mexico coast, but how many residents actually heeded the warning is unknown.

"You hope that somehow at the last minute a bunch of people got up and left or went somewhere else," Florida Senator Marco Rubio told CNN.

But judging from the number of homes reduced to "sticks," he said "my sense is they are going to find more victims."

Rubio added: "I truly pray I'm wrong, but common sense tells you that if you were in that house when that happened you did not make it."

Search-and-rescue teams were using sniffer dogs as they sifted through the rubble looking for victims.

- 'I can't sell it now' -

Bob Tenbrunson, a Mexico Beach retiree, rode out the storm at his daughter's house in nearby Panama City and returned to survey the damage to his home.

"I was going to stay here until it turned to a Cat 4," he said. "So I followed the mandatory evacuation order and left with my wife.

"Luckily we did not get a surge," Tenbrunson said of his home. "I've got two trees on the roof and a couple of holes on the roof. I have been trying to patch it up the best I can."

The rest of Mexico Beach did not fare as well, and most of the beachfront homes, restaurants and stores were obliterated by the storm.

"I spent my life savings and retirement to stay here so I cant' sell it now," Tenbrunson said. "I just have to be hopeful that (the town) will be rebuilt and fixed."

At least four deaths from the storm have been confirmed in Florida, five in Virginia, one in Georgia and one in North Carolina.

Hundreds of thousands of people remain without electricity in Florida, Georgia and Virginia, and officials say it could be weeks before power is fully restored.

Hurricane Michael made landfall in Mexico Beach on Wednesday as a Category 4 storm.

Long, the FEMA chief, said Michael was the most intense hurricane to strike the Florida Panhandle since record keeping began in 1851.

Many of the damaged Florida buildings were not built to withstand a storm above the strength of a Category 3 hurricane on the five-level Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale, Long added.

- Air force base heavily damaged -

About 5,000 US servicemen were deployed to help with relief and recovery efforts, the Pentagon said, using 100 helicopters and 1,800 high-water vehicles.

Tyndall Air Force Base, home to the F-22 stealth fighter, suffered extensive damage, according to aerial photos of the coastal facility.

The base was evacuated ahead of the hurricane and the costly fighter planes were flown to other installations out of the path of the storm.

In devastated Mexico Beach, where Hurricane Michael unleashed its most violent rains and winds, residents are taking stock of the damage, reuniting with their loved ones -- and bracing for what will be a long, difficult clean-up operation.

Some came Friday with vans or moving trucks, hoping to recover as many personal effects from their splintered homes as they could. Others came with nothing -- as there is nothing left to save.

Charles Smith, 57, has run the beachfront Gulf View Motel for 34 years. Now, it stands in ruins.

The facade was destroyed, the windows shattered. Three beach houses on stilts plowed into the building.

"I couldn't open the back door because of water. Wind came in, knocked the windows off -- the refrigerator is now stuck in the bathroom," Smith told AFP, surveying the horrendous mess.

But the hotelier said he is determined to get back on his feet.

"Maybe FEMA will help me out -- I would appreciate that," he said, referring to the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

"I'm going to get my business back, get an architect, go to city planning -- maybe I get my motel back within two years. It's going to take three to six months just to get electric in here," he predicted.

"It's going to be a fight."

- Bridge out -

Emergency crews have set up a temporary cell phone tower to help residents cut off by Michael's fury.

Firefighters, rescuers, personnel from Florida and other states, and FEMA have set up a task force headquarters in the seaside community and have split up responsibility for the area into different search zones.

From first light on Friday, excavators and dump trucks cleared roads to allow traffic, specifically aid convoys, to get through.

But a bridge was washed out between the city and Port St. Joe to the southeast, making it impossible to get there via coastal roads.

Florida Governor Rick Scott visited Mexico Beach on Friday for the first time since Michael made landfall on Wednesday as a Category 4 hurricane with winds of 155 miles per hour (250 kilometers per hour).

"The city has been devastated -- it's like a bomb went off. It's like a war zone," Scott told AFP. "Lots of stuff is unstable, so I want everyone to be cautious."

While food and water distribution is well underway, "we continue to have needs, and I expect the federal government to do their job," he added.

- 'Take what you need' -

Further down the beach from the Gulf View Motel, a local supermarket is beyond repair, its doors smashed in. Locals are helping themselves to snacks, cigarettes and even bottles of booze.

One young woman, who asked not to be identified, said the owners told residents to help themselves.

"'Take what you need but only what you need,' they said," the woman told AFP, a bottle of liquor in her hand. "This is all we need right now."

Bob Tenbrunson, a retiree, fled his home in Mexico Beach before Michael hit, taking shelter in nearby Panama City with his wife at their daughter's home.

After seeing the damage, he set about fixing what he could.

Tenbrunson, his hands dirty from clearing away debris, said he had spent his life savings and his retirement pension on his home here.

"I can't sell it now so I just have to be hopeful that (the city) will be rebuilt and fixed," he told AFP. "I just can't imagine how it is going to look. Several of our nice restaurants in town are no longer there."

Tenbrunson admitted he was not meant to be in town -- emergency personnel have asked residents to stay away to allow the sniffer dogs to hunt through the debris for victims.

"This is really a beach town -- no high-rise buildings. It makes me sad," he admitted with a sigh.


Related Links
Bringing Order To A World Of Disasters
A world of storm and tempest
When the Earth Quakes


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Indonesia calls off grim search for dead in quake-tsunami
Palu, Indonesia (AFP) Oct 11, 2018
Indonesia Thursday called off the grim search for those killed in a quake-tsunami, with no hope of retrieving around 5,000 bodies believed to be still buried under the ruins nearly two weeks after the disaster. The magnitude 7.5 quake and a subsequent tsunami razed swathes of the city of Palu on Sulawesi island on September 28. A total 2,073 bodies had been recovered since the twin disasters, authorities said Thursday. But there are fears that 5,000 more could be buried beneath the ruined ci ... read more

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