#Nassau, September 13, 2019 – Bahamas – Prime Minister the Most Hon. Dr. Hubert Minnis has announced plans
for a National Prayer Service to honour the lives lost to Hurricane Dorian.
The Government has invited the Bahamas Christian Council to plan
the National Prayer Service, which will take place on Wednesday 18 September at
Bahamas Faith Ministries International, Carmichael Road, starting at 7pm. The
prayer service will mark the culmination of a National Day of Prayer and
Fasting.
Flags are also to be flown at half-mast on all public buildings to
mourn the dead. The date of a National Day of Mourning will be announced at an
appropriate time.
“We are a nation in mourning,” said Prime Minister Minnis in a
national update on Hurricane Dorian, Wednesday 11 September.
“The grief is unbearable following the devastating impact of
Hurricane Dorian, which has left behind death, destruction and despair on Grand
Bahama and Abaco, our second and third most populous islands.”
The Prime Minister acknowledged that there are many deaths and
many still missing. The number of deaths is expected to significantly increase.
“Many are grieving the loss of loved ones. Many are in despair
wondering if their loved ones are still alive,” said Prime Minister Minnis.
“To those who have lost loved
ones, I know there is absolutely nothing we can say that will lessen your pain
and your loss. Our sympathies go out to the
families of each person who died. Let
us pray for them during this time of grief.”
The Prime Minister assured that
accurate and timely information will be provided on the loss of life as it is
available.
“We will first and foremost put
the priority on notifying families and giving them the help they need to grieve,”
said Prime Minister Minnis.
Efforts
are ramping up to collect those who died in the storm with the help of
international aid agencies.
“We
are being transparent and responsible in this process,” said the Prime
Minister.
The
Government is also providing counseling to those who need someone to help them
go through this difficult process.
“Hurricane
Dorian is an historic tragedy,” said Prime Minister Minnis, noting a report by the
Caribbean
Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA) that described the storm as “the
strongest Atlantic hurricane documented to directly impact a land mass since
records began, tying it with the Great Florida Labor Day Hurricane of 1935.”
The report also noted that Hurricane Dorian “affected
the north-western Bahama islands for an approximate total of 68 hours, with the
southern eye-wall planted over Grand Bahama, for about 30 hours.”
“We will need as many spiritual resources as we will need physical resources, to rebuild lives and to recover,” said the Prime Minister.
Release: The Office of the Prime Minister