SANTIAGO, Dominican Republic, Dec. 13, 2007

Tropical Storm Olga's Trail Of Destruction

25 Dead in Puerto Rico & Dominican Republic; 7 Towns Completely Flooded

    • People in this neighborhood in Santiago de los Caballeros, Dominican Republic, Dec. 12, 2007, run for their lives as floods from Tropical Storm Olga push forward from the Yaque River.

      People in this neighborhood in Santiago de los Caballeros, Dominican Republic, Dec. 12, 2007, run for their lives as floods from Tropical Storm Olga push forward from the Yaque River.  (AP)

    • Returning to his home after floods caused by Tropical Storm Olga, this man in Santiago de los Caballeros, Dominican Republic, Dec. 12, 2007, is met by scenes of destruction and bits and pieces of what used to be homes.

      Returning to his home after floods caused by Tropical Storm Olga, this man in Santiago de los Caballeros, Dominican Republic, Dec. 12, 2007, is met by scenes of destruction and bits and pieces of what used to be homes.  (AP)

    • People carry their belongings as they evacuate flooded areas caused by Tropical Storm Olga in Santiago de los Caballeros, Dominican Republic, Dec. 12, 2007.

      People carry their belongings as they evacuate flooded areas caused by Tropical Storm Olga in Santiago de los Caballeros, Dominican Republic, Dec. 12, 2007.  (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa)

    Previous slide Next slide
  • Interactive Storm Tracker

    Follow all the storms of the 2009 season with satellite images, warnings and wind speed charts.

  • Photo Essay Noel Turns Nasty

    Tropical storm triggers flooding and mudslides that kill at least 20 in Dominican Republic.

(AP)  Dominican authorities reported 11 more deaths Thursday in floods caused by Tropical Storm Olga, raising the Caribbean-wide death toll to 25.

The vast majority were killed in the central Dominican province of Santiago after officials, fearing a collapse of a dam, ordered the release of billions of gallons of water into the Yaque River and inundated seven towns along the waterway's path.

"We knew the damage we were going to cause below. We did not want to, but we had to," Octavio Rodriguez, a member of the committee that decided to open the floodgates, told The Associated Press.

People complained on local radio that they were not warned of the water release from the dam, and officials acknowledged it might have caused some of the deaths.

"We have an emergency situation. It's a catastrophe," Gov. Jose Izquierdo said.

The storm was also blamed for two deaths in northern Haiti and one in Puerto Rico.

Dominican Attorney General Radhames Jimenez said at least seven people were killed and 5,000 evacuated. The storm was also blamed for one death in Puerto Rico, where a rain-triggered avalanche buried an SUV.

Families living along the banks of the swollen Yuna River near Santiago were evacuating, placing mattresses atop their heads, and climbing aboard motorcycles headed toward higher ground. Televisions and small ovens were stacked outside humble wooden homes, ready to be moved. Trucks carrying soldiers headed toward Santiago province.

As heavy rains began to overwhelm the Tavera Dam, outside Santiago, the country's second-largest city, officials gave the order to begin releasing millions of gallons per second into the river, said Ismael Matias, planning chief of the Dominican emergency operations center.

Local authorities had warned repeatedly that a release was possible during the storm and told people to evacuate areas in the path of floodwaters rising as high as 66 feet above normal, Matias said. It was unclear if the warnings were heeded or even relayed.

"Perhaps some people did not believe that the water was going to come and they stayed, that's possible," Matias told The Associated Press.

Olga struck nearly two weeks after the official end of the Atlantic hurricane season. It is only the 10th named storm to develop in the month of December since record keeping began in 1851, according to the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami.

"It's not completely unusual to have a storm form in December," said Daniel Brown, a hurricane specialist at the center, who noted that three named storms have formed after Nov. 30 since 2003.

At 10 a.m. EST, Olga was centered about 75 miles south of Guantanamo, Cuba, and moving west at about 23 mph. It had maximum sustained winds of about 40 mph, the hurricane center said.

Forecasters predicted it would gradually weaken into a tropical depression.

The storm passed through the southwestern areas of the Dominican Republic that were hardest hit by Tropical Storm Noel six weeks ago. At least 87 deaths in the country were blamed on Noel, the deadliest storm of the 2007 Atlantic hurricane season.

The storm passed Puerto Rico on Tuesday night, knocking out electricity to 79,000 people and water to 144,000.

A tropical storm warning was in effect for the southeastern Bahamas and the Turks and Caicos Islands, meaning tropical storm conditions are expected there within 24 hours.

Olga will be included in the tally for the 2007 hurricane season, bringing the number of named storms to 15, including six hurricanes. The next season begins June 1.

© MMVII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by ubrew12 December 14, 2007 2:19 AM EST
erichsh said: "The solution [to Global Warming]? Obviously just take from the rich and give to the poor. How convenient. Alarmist global warming ''predictions'' only provides a convenient coverup for this agenda."
It needn''t. It obviously didn''t fool you. Global warming is a separate concern from wealth redistribution, and attempting to conflate them is paranoia of the worst kind.
Reply to this comment
by sbb2211 December 13, 2007 7:15 PM EST
This rain system has gotten more press that any storm for the past two years!

Give us a break already! This is not that big a deal! The statistics (and history) show that we will have some kind of tropical system form AFTER the end of the ''hurricane'' season 50% of the time!
Reply to this comment
by erichsh December 13, 2007 2:40 PM EST
Here in NYC the snow is coming down, with predictions for another major snowstorm for update this weekend. This year, like last year, was an extraordinarily slow season for tropical activity.

But - according to the global warming characters, we were supposed to be beseiged by Cat5 hurricanes as the oceans warm up, yadayada.... - right? (Just ask Al Gore).

And yet you''ve got clowns like V_161877 not only pronouncing this Olga as a product of global warming, but in the process revealing the true underlying agenda of the activists - that it''s all the fault of those rich countries like the USA, at the expense of those poor countries.

The solution? Obviously just take from the rich and give to the poor. How convenient. Alarmist global warming "predictions" only provides a convenient coverup for this agenda.
Reply to this comment
by beehive21-2009 December 13, 2007 1:57 PM EST
Nature cleaning house for the oil spills and more on the way?
Reply to this comment

Exclusive Webshow

Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie." Watch Now

Latest News
News in Pictures
Scroll Left Scroll Right
Connect with CBS News

Stay connected with the CBS News using your favorite social networks and online news applications: