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Saturday, 8 October 2016

Hurricane Matthew: Haiti dead reach 800 as south awaits aid

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The UN has warned it could take days for the full impact of Hurricane Matthew in Haiti to emerge, as the death toll soars to more than 800.

The death toll has doubled, and may rise, as rescue teams gain access to southern areas cut off by the storm. The World Food Programme's Carlos Veloso says some of the hard-hit towns can only be reached by air or sea.
Men carry a coffin after Hurricane Matthew hit Cavaillon, Haiti, on 6 October 2016.
Information on the number of dead is starting to trickle in from remote areas

Destroyed buildings and trees with belongings strewn over the ground in the town of Jeremie, Haiti on 6 October 2016
The town of Jeremie was among the worst hit
Many of the deaths in Haiti were in the south-western coast, which suffered the full force of the hurricane this week. Hurricane Matthew is currently battering the coastline of the US state of Florida but has been downgraded to a Category Two storm, with sustained wind speed dropping to 110mph (177km/h).

Damage caused by Hurricane Matthew in Jeremie, Haiti

Category Five is the strongest on the five-step Saffir-Simpson scale of hurricane intensity.
Rescue efforts are under way to assess the destruction left in the wake of the most powerful Caribbean storm in a decade. Haiti's Civil Protection Agency on Friday doubled the death toll from the hurricane from 400 to more than 800.