After Irma, calls for help from the Caribbean

Tuesday's World Events   —   Posted on September 12, 2017

(Compiled from reports by Hugh Morris at the UK Daily Telegraph and Tara John at Time .com) – Hurricane Irma has devastated several Caribbean islands, with at least 24 fatalities and untold billions of dollars in property damage in one of the strongest storms ever to strike the region.

Those hardest hit include Barbuda, both the Dutch and French sides of St. Martin, the U.S. and British Virgin islands and Anguilla.

Officials and residents in some of those places expressed disappointment with the amount of foreign emergency assistance they were receiving and what they considered to be a shortage of international media attention.

Antigua and Barbuda

This sovereign nation of two islands (Antigua and Barbuda) was the first to be hit by Hurricane Irma on Wednesday. Barbuda, the less populated, was by far the worst hit. The storm, which packed winds of up to 185 miles an hour, destroyed 95% of the buildings and left half of Barbuda’s population, of around 1,400, homeless. At least one person, a two-year-old child, is confirmed to have died in the storm and it will cost an estimated $100 million to rebuild the island.

“I would have cried because that (devastation) was so heart wrenching. I couldn’t believe it,” Gaston Browne, the prime minister, told ABC News. “It’s one of the worst feelings I’ve ever felt in my entire life.”

The destruction from the hurricane was “even worse than [Prime Minister Browne] thought,” said Ronald Sanders, the country’s ambassador to the U.S., after Browne took a helicopter ride Friday to survey the toll. “The island is debris, that’s all it is,” he said. …

Sanders described how Barbuda had been completely evacuated, with airplanes, boats and barges used to transport some 1,600 evacuees to neighboring Antigua, where residents have been asked to take in the displaced. (The islands are separated by about 28 miles. Antigua has around 80,000 people, while Barbuda has approximately 1,600. The nation is part of the former British Empire and gained its independence in 1981. The islands thrive on tourism and are known for their resorts, pristine beaches and rain forests.)

…“The large international countries have not done anything,” Sanders said. “We’ve had telephone calls of condolences and worry and concern, but no practical help to deal with the situation. The big countries you would have thought would have come forward to offer a hand; they haven’t done so yet. So we’ve had to deal with it ourselves.” … “This is a humanitarian crisis of enormous proportions,” Sanders said.

U.S. Virgin Islands

In a video posted on Facebook, Kenneth Mapp, the governor of the U.S. territory, described the scale of the devastation and updated on the relief and recovery effort.

The hurricane ripped off rooftops, including the top of Government House, one of the largest governor’s residences in the Lesser Antilles, and destroyed two fire stations and two police stations. At the Schneider Regional Medical Center on St. Thomas, walls caved in, windows shattered and the cancer care unit was destroyed. Patients in the intensive care unit had to be evacuated during the storm. Telephone service was knocked out in many places. …

The governor said work was underway to restore communication services. Other short-term priorities are cleaning up debris, distributing tarpaulins to cover damaged roofs, and supplying food and water to those in need.

The coastguard was clearing the harbor and authorities had managed to clear the Wilson Airport runway, allowing large military aircraft to deliver relief supplies, Mapp said.

He said President Trump offered “his personal assurance for the full support of the federal government.”

The U.S. government had been “awesome in its partnership before this event, during this event and now as we work for our recovery,” Mapp said.

Sint Maarten/St. Martin

Irma crashed into Saint Martin around six hours after striking Antigua and Barbuda, wrecking homes, flinging cars and uprooting trees as it whipped through the territory. The island is split into two parts, which are overseen by the French and Dutch governments, and has a total population of around 80,000.

“It’s an enormous catastrophe. Ninety-five percent of the island is destroyed,” Daniel Gibbs, the president of the French St. Martin territorial council, said in a radio interview according to AFP. “I’m in shock. It’s frightening,” he said.

Boats were stacked up on land, homes flattened or under water, and streets turned into gushing streams in the Dutch and French territories that share an island. There is no power, running water or gasoline.

Dutch officials have said that as much as 70 percent of the homes on the Dutch side of the island were badly damaged or destroyed.

Dutch and French officials said the current death toll of five was likely to rise.

U.S. officials deployed C-130s to evacuate U.S. citizens from the French Caribbean island of St. Martin to Puerto Rico. Nearly 160 were evacuated on Friday and approximately 700 more on Saturday. An estimated 5,000 Americans were believed to be trapped on the island as of Saturday.

The Netherlands and France have sent military support, emergency food and water to their territories.

Looting, gunshots and a lack of clean drinking water were reported on the French side of St. Martin, which is home to five-star resorts.

Anguilla

Assessment of the destruction was still underway Friday. The Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency said 90% of government buildings and business structures on the island suffered damage, along with the main water supply and about 90% of the electricity infrastructure.

The airport runway and most roads leading to the airport had been cleared of debris, and British troops had supported refurbishment of two shelters damaged during the hurricane, the agency reported.

Britain was also providing a 12-person liaison and reconnaissance operating team.But Dorothea Hodge, a former Anguilla government official, told the Guardian newspaper on Wednesday that Britain’s response had been “pathetic” and “disgraceful.”



Background

Read about the Caribbean Islands at wikipedia.

Boston chef Daniel Poe and his wife were on St. Martin during the hurricane. Read his story at bostonherald.com.