Alpha, the Atlantic season’s record-breaking 22nd named storm, left at least 10 people dead in Haiti and the Dominican Republic before moving north into the Atlantic Ocean and weakening into a tropical depression, authorities said.
The storm also left two dozen people missing in the two countries as mudslides and overflowing rivers flooded streets and destroyed homes, according to officials in both nations on Monday.
Alpha passed over the two nations that share the Caribbean island of Hispaniola and heavy rains on ground already saturated from other recent storms, including Hurricane Wilma — which was blamed for 12 deaths in Haiti.
Alpha rumbled ashore on Saturday as a tropical storm with maximum winds of 80kph near the southern Dominican town of Barahona and doused the region with showers.
It was later downgraded to a tropical depression after passing over the mountainous zone near the Dominican border with Haiti. The system moved into the open Atlantic after passing over the south-eastern Bahamas. It posed no threat to the United States and was expected to dissipate.
Emergency authorities were still assessing the damage from Alpha and the death toll could rise, Maria Alta Jean Baptiste, the head of Haiti’s civil protection agency, told reporters.
The deaths from Alpha include three people who drowned in flooding in the village of Anse Rouge in northern Haiti and a fourth in the north-eastern town of Hinche, Jean Baptiste said.
In the south, two people were swept away to their deaths after a river broke its banks in rural Grande Anse, Jean Baptiste said. Two people died after being electrocuted during flooding, one in the Port-au-Prince suburb of Carrefour and the other in the southern town of Jacmel.
Floods and mudslides damaged or destroyed at least 400 homes around the country, leaving hundreds stranded in shelters, said Abel Nazaire, of Haiti’s Risk and Disaster Management agency.
Twenty-three people have been reported missing since the storm in Haiti, including 19 who were swept away by flood waters in the town of Leogane, west of the capital.
”We are conducting searches right now, and we’re extremely worried,” Leogane mayor Taylor Rigaud said in a telephone interview. He said dozens of families were in shelters after their homes were inundated.
In the Dominican Republic, authorities found the bodies on Monday of two fishermen whose boat capsized in the rough seas that preceded the storm, said Jose Luis German, spokesperson for the country’s emergency operations committee.
Officials also searched for a 14-year-old boy who was swept away by flood waters in the northern town of Guaricanos, German said.
Haiti’s weather service predicted more rain for Monday, which could cause more flooding.
The Atlantic storm season officially ends on November 30. — Sapa-AP
Associated Press writer Jose P Monegro contributed to this report from Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic