150 Nigerian Medical Students Currently Stranded After Hurricane Maria

Several Nigerian medical students have been stranded in the Dominican Republic after hurricane Maria devastated the country.
It has been revealed that over 150 Nigerian medical students are stranded in the Dominican Republic after the devastating effect of  hurricane Maria.
According to The Sun News, the students, studying at the All Saints University Medical College, have been left in the cold with no official assistance forthcoming since the hurricane struck on Monday. Many of them are said to have lost virtually all their belongings.
Link opened for communication by the government of Dominica allows only text messages  for foreigners, especially students.
The medical campus, whose main institution is in Canada is said to have  opened channels for the  American and Canadian government to evacuate  their citizens.
It was further learnt that the same measure is being taken by other countries like Jamaica, Britain, France, Germany and China, pending when the institution would be rehabilitated.
Reports classified the extent of the destruction as category five scale.
The Hurricane Maria slammed into the lsland of Dominica in the early hours of Monday and removed over 82 percent of the roofs of buildings, including that of the  official residence of the Prime Minister.
Saturday Sun, however, gathered that  arrangements were being made by the institution to  relocate the Nigerian students  to a neighbouring country , Saint Vincent.
As of now, the relief materials being shipped into the beleaguered nation are specifically for the citizens, leaving foreign students to their fate.
A source said: “ there is no food, no good water, no shelter and no communications, adding that many of the students lost their traveling passports to the hurricane”
All efforts to reach Mrs Abike Dabiri, the Senior Special Assistant on the Diaspora matters, failed as she did not pick her phone.

Source: Tori