Puerto Rican Government Admits 911 People Died of ‘Natural Causes’ After Hurricane
The official death toll in Puerto Rico following Hurricane Maria currently stands at 51, a suspiciously low number given the devastation seen across the island. But a new report confirms that after the hurricane hit on Sept. 20, an additional 911 bodies have been cremated and the cause of death in each case was labeled “natural causes.”
On Friday, BuzzFeed reported that the Puerto Rican government “allowed 911 bodies to be cremated since Hurricane Maria made landfall, and that not one of them were physically examined by a government medical examiner to determine if it should be included in the official death toll.”
The admission follows a troubling investigation published earlier the same day that showed that funeral directors and crematoriums in Puerto Rico were allowed by the government to cremate bodies of people who died in the wake of the hurricane without the appropriate medical and forensic examinations that would determine if they should be considered victims of the natural disaster.
The effects of this oversight are astounding—not only would it mean that the official death toll might have been grossly understated for both political and bureaucratic reasons, but also that families of those who died wouldn’t be eligible for relief from U.S. federal agencies, including FEMA, BuzzFeed’s Nidhi Prakash reported from Puerto Rico.