World | Caribbean Caribbean Storm's Toll at 38 Tens of thousands homeless as UN scrambles for aid By Michael O'Connor Posted Dec 15, 2007 8:32 AM CST Copied Residents are seen next to the the remains of their destroyed houses in Santiago de los Caballeros, Dominican Republic, Thursday, Dec. 13, 2007, a day after tropical Storm Olga hit the area. AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa) (Associated Press) The death toll from a violent storm that ripped through the Caribbean earlier this week has risen to 38 as flood waters recede and rescuers comb through the wreckage, the BBC reports. All but three of the deaths from Tropical Storm Olga were in the Dominican Republic, where tens of thousands are homeless and crops have been devastated. Survivors say the government performed miserably during the storm. Nearly two dozen deaths in the Dominican Republic occurred after authorities, fearing a dam collapse, released billions of gallons of water into a northern river. Residents say they had no time to evacuate. "They must beg our forgiveness for what has happened," said a furious local. The UN is scrambling to get relief delivered. Read These Next We now know what might send bedbugs scurrying. Their dad left them a nudist colony. Buyers are scarce. Back to the Future star is at the center of a shocking suit. Pete Hegseth has some academic news for military members. Report an error