CatoCooper13
New Member
- Joined
- Jun 18, 2003
- Messages
- 6,441
- Reaction score
- 4
French heatwave toll over 11,400
AFP - More than 11,400 people died during a record-breaking heatwave during the first half of August, the French government said in its first official death toll from the disaster widely seen as mishandled by top ministers.
Health Minister Jean-Francois Mattei, who has been the target of most of the criticism, said in a statement that 11,435 more deaths than normal were registered August 1-15, when daily temperatures of 40 degrees Celsius and above roasted the country.
"These are provisional figures, but duty to the truth obliges me to make them public right now," Mattei said.
The release of the official death toll came after the government had played down doctors' warnings of rapidly growing piles of bodies in the country's morgues.
Once it became clear that morgues were overflowing with the victims -- most of them elderly -- Mattei and other ministers acknowledged the crisis and, as the temperatures finally started to drop on August 14, implemented a national disaster plan.
Officials avoided giving a toll until Friday, but France's biggest chain of undertakers, the Pompes Funebres Generales, said it estimated the toll at 10,400 for the first three weeks of August and 13,000 for the whole of the month.
The interior ministry had said that its own figures showed the number of heatwave deaths to be under 10,000 but did not give a more specific toll.
The head of a union of hospital emergency doctors that first rang the alarm, Patrick Pelloux, told AFP that "even now, the heat is continuing in some regions and there are still patients dying from the effects of the heatwave."
He said that "we don't want the consequences of this heatwave to be a macabre number, but rather an opportunity to truly understand the difficulties in the health and social networks, and to ensure that resources aren't forgotten" in public hospitals.
Mattei has fended off calls to step down over his handling of the disaster, but onAugust 18 he accepted the resignation of France's surgeon-general, Lucien Abenhaim.
Abenhaim said he felt that he was a scapegoat.
"I didn't accept responsibility for what happened. I resigned because the minister of health (Mattei) was talking to the radios and saying that he hadn't been informed or alerted... but he had been alerted," he told BBC radio on Wednesday.
©AAP 2003
AFP - More than 11,400 people died during a record-breaking heatwave during the first half of August, the French government said in its first official death toll from the disaster widely seen as mishandled by top ministers.
Health Minister Jean-Francois Mattei, who has been the target of most of the criticism, said in a statement that 11,435 more deaths than normal were registered August 1-15, when daily temperatures of 40 degrees Celsius and above roasted the country.
"These are provisional figures, but duty to the truth obliges me to make them public right now," Mattei said.
The release of the official death toll came after the government had played down doctors' warnings of rapidly growing piles of bodies in the country's morgues.
Once it became clear that morgues were overflowing with the victims -- most of them elderly -- Mattei and other ministers acknowledged the crisis and, as the temperatures finally started to drop on August 14, implemented a national disaster plan.
Officials avoided giving a toll until Friday, but France's biggest chain of undertakers, the Pompes Funebres Generales, said it estimated the toll at 10,400 for the first three weeks of August and 13,000 for the whole of the month.
The interior ministry had said that its own figures showed the number of heatwave deaths to be under 10,000 but did not give a more specific toll.
The head of a union of hospital emergency doctors that first rang the alarm, Patrick Pelloux, told AFP that "even now, the heat is continuing in some regions and there are still patients dying from the effects of the heatwave."
He said that "we don't want the consequences of this heatwave to be a macabre number, but rather an opportunity to truly understand the difficulties in the health and social networks, and to ensure that resources aren't forgotten" in public hospitals.
Mattei has fended off calls to step down over his handling of the disaster, but onAugust 18 he accepted the resignation of France's surgeon-general, Lucien Abenhaim.
Abenhaim said he felt that he was a scapegoat.
"I didn't accept responsibility for what happened. I resigned because the minister of health (Mattei) was talking to the radios and saying that he hadn't been informed or alerted... but he had been alerted," he told BBC radio on Wednesday.
©AAP 2003