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News > Latin America

Cuba: Death Toll From Storm Alberto Raises to Seven, Two Missing

  • A view of a partially flooded farm as Subtropical Storm Alberto passed Cuba's west coast of Cuba on May 26, 2018.

    A view of a partially flooded farm as Subtropical Storm Alberto passed Cuba's west coast of Cuba on May 26, 2018. | Photo: Reuters

Published 2 June 2018
Opinion

The island country's largest reservoir, Zaza, in the Sancti-Spíritus Province in central Cuba, reached its second highest level on record.

Seven people drowned and two remain missing as a result of flooding last week in Cuba caused by storm Alberto that forced tens of thousands to evacuate and caused a spill of oily water in Cienfuegos Bay, Cuban authorities said.

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Cuba had previously reported a preliminary estimate of four dead in the floods that damaged crops and infrastructure, left many communities cut off and forced authorities to open sluice gates on reservoirs that reached bursting levels.

Alberto, the first named Atlantic storm of the 2018 season, scraped by Cuba's west coast before charging into the southern United States, but still brought heavy rain.

That caused treatment ponds of waste at the Cienfuegos oil refinery to overflow, resulting in a spill of 12,000 cubic meters of oily water into the bay, according to local media reports.

In the western province of Pinar del Rio, the National Institute of Hydraulic Resource said it had rained three times more than the historic May median, bringing reservoirs to 92 percent of their capacity and collapsing more than 40 homes.

The island country's largest reservoir, Zaza, in the Sancti-Spíritus Province in central Cuba, reached its second highest level on record.

As the new hurricane season gets underway, parts of Cuba are still recovering from Hurricane Irma, which rampaged through the island over three days, killing at least ten people last September.

Forecasters said last week they expected the 2018 Atlantic hurricane season to be near-normal to above-normal in number and intensity of storms.

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