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TS Isaac death count rises to 24 in Haiti

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This NOAA Satellite image taken on August 24, 2012 show Tropical Storm Isaac as it travels off the coast of the Dominican Republic and Mexico as it travels toward Florida. UPI/NOAA
This NOAA Satellite image taken on August 24, 2012 show Tropical Storm Isaac as it travels off the coast of the Dominican Republic and Mexico as it travels toward Florida. UPI/NOAA 
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Published: Aug. 28, 2012 at 11:48 AM

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti, Aug. 28 (UPI) -- The death toll in Haiti from Tropical Storm Isaac climbed to 24 Tuesday as disaster officials warned the number could rise and damage assessment resumed.

Edgard Celestin, a spokesman for Haiti's Office of Civil Protection, said three people were missing and 42 others sustained injuries, The Miami Herald reported.

Haitian and humanitarian officials were still assessing the storm's impact.

Some areas of the mountainous southern region remained isolated from assessment teams trying to evaluate the loss of crops and homes, the Herald said.

"We are still collecting information," said George Ngwa, communications leader for the U.N.'s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

Haitian Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe, who visited several communities in the capital Sunday with President Michel Martelly, said the disaster reinforced the need to boost resettlement efforts for people still living in tent villages since a devastating earthquake in 2010.

Haitian officials said at least 2,346 homes damaged and 335 were destroyed.

Humanitarian officials said the biggest concern is over crop loss and Isaac's impact on a cholera epidemic that has killed more than 7,000 Haitians, the newspaper reported.

On Monday, Doctors Without Borders reopened a 275-bed Cholera Treatment Center in Carrefour, a Port-au-Prince suburb.

"We still have two months of hurricane season," Myrtha Kaulard, World Food Program's representative in Haiti. "In rural areas, we need not to underestimate the fact that some communities are isolated because beyond the collapsed bridge there are entire households that lack all possible access."

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