Après l’ouragan Melissa, le Grand Sud d’Haïti réclame de l’aide — et des comptes
  After Hurricane Melissa, Haiti’s Southern Peninsula Demands Help — and Accountability     By Patrick Prézeau Stephenson * (Le Français suit)   PORT-AU-PRINCE — The storm had a name; the losses do not. As Hurricane Melissa tore across Haiti’s southern peninsula this week, rivers rose into homes, bridges buckled and long-fragile roads snapped. By Friday, local authorities were estimating more than 23 deaths, with over 20 reported in Petit-Goâve alone, and families still searching for the missing in rural communes where the water fell fastest and help is slowest.   In a stark Creole-language communiqué, a grassroots coalition from the south, Evèy Gran Sid, cataloged not only the damage — ruined harvests, drowned livestock, collapsed classrooms and clinics, severed market routes — but the failures that made it worse: rivers left undredged, floodplains unprotected, no preventive evacuations, official warnings that came late or not at all. “We have been living in calamity si...