Rescue teams rush supplies to Caribbean

US and Canadian troops rushed medical supplies, drinking water and chlorine tablets today to flood-battered towns in the Caribbean…

US and Canadian troops rushed medical supplies, drinking water and chlorine tablets today to flood-battered towns in the Caribbean countries of Haiti and the Dominican Republic.

The official death toll has climbed to about 1,000, but with hundreds missing in both countries it was feared that the final toll could climb as high as 2,000.

Rain returned yesterday and fell steadily as US Marines delivered drinking water and chlorine tablets to hundreds in the southern Haitian town of Mapou, where most houses were submerged under more than 10 feet of water.

As many as 1,000 were feared dead in Mapou, according to Ms Margarette Martin, the Government's representative the southeast province.

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Officials had counted about 300 bodies in the town, 30 miles southeast of the capital of Port-au-Prince, said Dr Yvon Lavissiere, the region's health director.

Mudslides had washed out roads, forcing aid workers and troops to fly in by helicopter. UN teams were trying to arrange boats to help recover bodies trapped under trees and in houses in Mapou.

"You can still see bodies in the water coming up," said Mr Michel Matera, a UN technical adviser for disasters who travelled to Mapou yesterday. "Palm trees are almost covered... There is a grave risk of an epidemic."

An estimated 10,000 people in 26 surrounding villages are in urgent need of help and essentially cut off by roads devoured mudslides, Mr Matera said.

"We are still having difficulty reaching them even by helicopter," he said. "We cannot land because of the flooding, nor can we get there on foot."

The UN World Food Programme planned to try to deliver eight tonnes of food to Mapou today, if troops could provide helicopters.

AP