By Bill Weir and Jennifer Rivera CNN
AGUAS BUENAS, Puerto Rico
(CNN) -- Miguel Olivera, now 75, survived combat and being impacted by
Agent Orange in Cambodia as the US waged war against the Viet Cong
decades ago.
Now, at home in Puerto Rico, he is facing another threat to his life -- a fridge without power.
He
needs insulin to survive but his last vial is sitting, at risk of
spoiling, in that refrigerator that can no longer keep it cool.
His town, Aguas Buenas, in the mountains above San Juan, was left tattered by Hurricane Maria.
The lush tropical foliage is gone -- as if a massive lawnmower came from the sky and shredded it all.
Olivera
and his wife Diana Aponte, 73, sheltered from the storm inside their
home -- it's built on concrete stilts sunk into the hillside, and Aponte
feared it would slide into the ravine.
Water came through the
shutters as the wind howled outside, and at one point the couple huddled
on the living room floor, prepared to die together.
"The hurricane is worse" than combat, Olivera says.
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