ADVERTISEMENT
The true danger this week isn’t one single event — it’s the overlap. A storm on its own is one thing. An earthquake is another. Heavy dust, flooding, collapsing infrastructure — each is a challenge. But when all of them hit at the same time, the pressure multiplies. Emergency responders in the Caribbean are stretched to their limits. Hospitals are juggling several crises at once: dust-triggered asthma attacks, injuries from flood rescues, dehydration cases, and now preparations for storm casualties. Some clinics are operating on generators. Pharmacies are reporting shortages of inhalers and basic medication. Shelters are filling with people escaping floods, even as storm warnings threaten more displacement.
Communication networks are overloaded. Phone lines are spotty. Some communities can’t call for help because the towers serving them are underwater or damaged. Even online updates — usually a lifeline during disasters — are slow and inconsistent due to outages and power cuts. It’s the kind of compounding risk that leaves people vulnerable not just to the weather itself, but to the breakdown of everything that keeps society functioning.