Nicaragua Network Hotline November 2, 1998

SPECIAL REPORT ON HURRICANE MITCH

Last week, northern and western Nicaragua was hit by Hurricane Mitch, a
storm that is being described as one of the deadliest natural disasters in
the country's history. The latest news reports from Nicaragua place the
death toll at 1,071. Of that number, at least 600 people are reported to
have been killed in the town of Posoltega in the Chinandega province when a
lake in a volcanic crater overflowed, producing massive mudslides. The
Washington Post reported today that fewer than 100 of the 2000 residents of
Posoltega had been found alive and that the rest were still missing. The
mayor of the town told a local radio station, "It is like a desert littered
with bodies." Defense Minister Pedro Joaquin Chamorro, who visited the town
earlier today, declared that there could be as many as 1500 dead from the
landslide alone.

Hurricane Mitch is the worst storm that Nicaragua has experienced since
Hurricane Joan wreaked millions of dollars in damage in 1998. Mitch was a
category 5 hurricane, the most severe classification. Meterologists have
reported that the rain that fell during the first 24 hours of Mitch exceded
the total that fell during the 1988 storm. Because of the severe flooding,
174 communities have been completely cut off and can only be reached by
helicopter. Twenty-four roads, 35 bridges, and approximately 5,100 homes
have been destroyed by the storm. Although the statistics are constantly
changing, today's newspapers in Nicaragua confirm that approximately 70,000
have been left homeless and 2,018 are reported missing. To date, the army
has evacuated 5,000 people, but because so many locations have been hit at
once, and the army has only 7 helicopters, rescue efforts have been
especially difficult. At the end of this report, we will provide specific
information on the many towns that have been hit.

President Aleman has been widely criticized for the lack of seriousness
with which he has handled the crisis. Last week, despite tremendous public
protest, he refused to declare a state of emergency, and instead declared
some of the most affected zones to be on "red alert." He explained this
refusal by claiming that non-governmental organizations would take
advantage of a "state of emergency" situation. He told reporters that if he
were to declare a national emergency, "there would be a river of profits
for many fishermen." Toward the end of the week, Aleman had softened his
tone somewhat and began to tell the public that he was not declaring a
state of emergency because only certain parts of the country had been
affected. Sources have reported that the president also denied a delegation
of Cuban doctors entrance into the country to assist the victims. During
the 1988 hurricane, Cuban doctors had arrived on the Caribbean Coast to
provide assistance even before the storm had ended.

We have received unconfirmed reports from Nicaragua that President Aleman
this morning finally declared a state of emergency - nearly a week after
Nicaragua was hit by the deadly storm. However, he has announced that all
international aid should be channeled through the government. A number of
major donations from international organizations have already been
channeled through the First Lady, the president's daughter, Maria Dolores
Aleman. This policy is completely consistent with Aleman's other efforts to
cripple the progressive NGO sector and centralize control of the flow of
humanitarian aid in the hands of the government. Even in the face of this
unprecedented crisis, approximately 20 cargo containers are being impounded
by Nicaraguan customs, with the government demanding that the
non-governmental recipients of the shipments pay exorbitant taxes on this
previously tax-exempt aid.

The Nicaragua Network, working in coalition with a number of other
solidarity and faith-based organizations, has been involved with an
intensive campaign to pressure the Nicaraguan government to release this
aid and ensure that all NGO's be allowed to resume the shipment of
tax-exempt aid. In light of the current emergency, we will turn up this
pressure. No government should be allowed to impound material aid when
there have been half a million people affected by a natural disaster of
this magnitude.

The Nicaragua Network calls on all concerned citizens to host emergency
fundraisers in your community or to make individual donations to assist the
hurricane victims. Checks can be sent to the Nicaragua Network and we will
channel the funds to the Augusto C. Sandino Foundation, Nicaragua's largest
secular non-governmental organization, which has been involved in disaster
relief efforts for over fifteen years. We channeled $80,000 in hurricane
aid through the FACS in 1988 and can vouch for their effectiveness.
Tax-deductible checks should be made out to NNEF/AGJ with "hurricane
relief" written on the memo line. Send your donation to 1247 E Street, SE
Washington, DC 20003.

A Pastors for Peace caravan is now beginning on five routes through the US.
The trucks on the caravan are almost completely filled with aid for
Nicaragua and Chiapas, but they can still add vehicles if communities would
like to join. Several vehicles will be returning to the U.S., so late
additions can caravan back home. Call the Pastors for Peace Chicago Office
at 773-271-4817 for information.

Quest for Peace is launching a three-month hurricane aid campaign to ship
rice and other products for disaster relief. Most needed are monetary
donations to purchase the rice in the US since Central American rice is now
scarce and expensive. Call Quest for Peace at 301-699-0042 for information
about donating money, medicine, clothing, blankets, or other products.

The following is a compilation of reports that we have received from
contacts in different regions and towns in Nicaragua. If you receive
further information from your contacts in Nicaragua, please send it to the
Nicaragua Network so that we can provide the most comprehensive information
possible.

Managua: Towns near Lake Managua, at the northern tip of the city, are
almost completely under water. The residents of the town of San Francisco
Libre, which sits at the edge of the lake, have had to be evacuated by
helicopter, since the main road leading to the town is completely
impassable. According to the October 30 edition of the local daily
newspaper La Prensa, some 2,500 people have been evacuated, and at last
count 62 houses were flooded to the level of two feet of water. An aerial
photo in the October 30 edition of the daily El Nuevo Diario of an area of
San Francisco Libre outside the main town shows only the tops of trees left
above the floodwaters. The town of Tipitapa, just outside of Managua, is
also heavily inundated and almost inaccessible because of the flooded
roads. [from Toby Mailman for the Weekly News Update on the Americas]

The Sandino Foundation reports that Managua is completely cut off from
communication with the rest of the country and that 1,395 families in the
capital have been left homeless.

Chinandega:

In the department of Chinandega, 800 times the normal precipitation has
fallen for this time of year. Reports from municipal emergency committees
in this western department estimate that 6,000 people are awaiting
evacuation. In the municipality of the city of Chinandega there are close
to 4,000 people in shelters, of whom more than half are children. Along the
Pacific coast of that department, the shrimp industry is suffering great
losses, with a preliminary estimate of US$30 million. Somotillo, in the
north of Chinandega, is one of the hardest hit communities and the
Panamerican Highway has been completely ripped apart at several points. The
most current official statistics for the department of Chinandega are
29,000 people affected, 189 houses destroyed and 108 shelters in use. [from
Anneli Tolvanen]

Matagalpa and Esteli: 

In the northern departments of Matagalpa and Esteli, the situation is
reported to be "very dramatic and dangerous" as mountainsides are
threatening landslides of mud, water and rocks on homes that are located
below. It has not been possible to establish communication with many of the
communities in the area. One journalist reported that 3,500 people have
been reported missing in Matagalpa. The reserves of emergency supplies that
had been collected at the mayor's office in Esteli have been exhausted and
it is reported that no supplies are coming into the city and there is
little left to be purchased. Some merchants in Esteli are apparently taking
advantage of the situation and increasing their prices. For a book of
matches, regularly priced at half a cordoba, vendors are now asking as much
as five cordobas. South of Esteli, in the community of La Trinidad, 500
people are reported to be isolated as a result of landslides with nowhere
to go for refuge.

The mayor of San Pedro, north of Esteli, travelled close to eight hours
through waters as high as to the waist to give a radio report on the
situation in her community. That community has been completely isolated and
after three days, 100 people have finally been able to leave in order to
look for food. She talked about the children becoming ill and the hillsides
threatening landslides. She also called on President Aleman to declare a
national emergency so that more international aid can be accessed and to
not politicize the disaster. [from Anneli Tolvanen]

According to October 30 morning radio news reports, in the northern town of
Esteli alone, more than 25,000 people have been affected by the heavy
rains. According to one Esteli resident all the schools are already filled
with children who have had to leave their homes, and people living in the
poorer neighborhoods, whose houses have been affected by the water flowing
into them, have sought other shelter, some with family members who live in
neighborhoods not so severely affected by the rains. In the northern town
of Wiwili, it was reported on October 29 that 30 houses were washed away by
a river which overflowed its banks, and in today's newspapers it was
reported that 60 houses in that community are under water. [Toby Mailman]

Other: The Sandino Foundation reports that the destruction of bridges and
roadways has also left the following provincial capitals cut off from the
rest of the country: Jinotega, S�baco, Granada, and Le�n.

We will provide more detailed information on the situation in Nicaragua as
it becomes available. We encourage you to send donations for the hurricane
victims to the Nicaragua Network at 1247 E Street, SE, Washington, DC
20003. Our phone number is (202) 544-9355, our e-mail address is
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

================================================================ 
Weekly News Update on the Americas
Nicaragua Solidarity Network of NY 339 Lafayette St, New York, NY 10012
212-674-9499 fax: 212-674-9139 


Louis Proyect

(http://www.panix.com/~lnp3/marxism.html)



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