That man, the king of vacations 'Cowboy' Bush failed in Katrina

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Apr 25, 2002
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'Cowboy' Bush failed in Katrina evacuation - Chavez
http://today.reuters.com/news/newsA...0_INTERNATIONAL-WEATHER-KATRINA-CHAVEZ-DC.XML

CARACAS, Venezuela (Reuters) - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, a vocal critic of the U.S. government, on Wednesday called President Bush a "cowboy" who had failed to manage the Hurricane Katrina disaster and evacuate victims.

"That government had no evacuation plan, it is incredible, the first power in the world that is so involved in Iraq ... and left its own population adrift," Chavez said in a cabinet meeting broadcast live on television.

His remarks came as U.S. authorities evacuated thousands of people from New Orleans and after Bush said it would take years to recover from flooding caused by Hurricane Katrina.

The death toll on Wednesday reached at least 200 in what Bush called the nation's worst natural disaster.

"That man, the king of vacations ... the king of vacations in his ranch said nothing but, you have to flee, and didn't say how ... that cowboy, the cowboy mentality," said Chavez, chuckling in a reference to Bush without naming him directly.

Chavez, an outspoken populist who calls Cuba's Fidel Castro an ally, often lambastes what he calls Washington's failed imperialist policies. He says the Bush administration is trying to assassinate him and calls the U.S. president "Mr. Danger."

The two governments frequently clash though the United States is the top oil client of Venezuela, the world's No. 5 crude exporter. Washington portrays Chavez as a menace who uses his nation's oil wealth to fund anti-democratic groups.

The Venezuelan president, applauded by supporters for his self-proclaimed socialist revolution to fight poverty, has offered to send cheap fuel, humanitarian aid and relief workers to the disaster area.

Venezuelan state oil firm PDVSA has offered $1 million from its U.S.-based refinery unit Citgo for relief efforts.
 
Apr 25, 2002
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ColdBlooded said:
Venezuelan state oil firm PDVSA has offered $1 million from its U.S.-based refinery unit Citgo for relief efforts.
U.S. Says unsolicited offers can be "counterproductive"
Venezuela Offers $1M, Oil, Food and Equipment for U.S. Victims of Hurricane Katrina


Thursday, Sep 01, 2005 Print format
By: Cleto Sojo - Venezuelanalysis.com

Sept 1, 2005 (Venezuelanalysis.com).- CITGO Petroleum Corporation has pledged a $1 million donation towards Hurricane Katrina relief efforts, the company’s President and CEO Félix Rodríguez announced yesterday through a press release.

Rodríguez said this donation had the full support of the company’s parent organization, the Venezuelan state oil company Petróleos de Venezuela, S.A. (PDVSA), as well as Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez.

“Our hearts go out to the victims of this terrible tragedy and CITGO stands prepared to offer its assistance,” Rodríguez said.

According to the CEO, the funds will be directed to appropriate relief organizations in the affected areas.

CEO Rodríguez traveled yesterday to Lake Charles, Louisiana where he met with local officials and visited the city’s Civic Center, which has been turned into a full-service shelter for storm refugees.

Rodríguez presented the local chapter of the American Red Cross, in charge of operations at the shelter, with a separate $25,000 donation to assist the organization in its efforts at the center.

2,200 victims are currently housed at the Civic Center, and more victims are expected to arrive.

A group of volunteers from the nearby CITGO Lake Charles Manufacturing Complex, known as Team CITGO, are helping in the relief efforts.

Rodríguez met with local and state officials, including Lake Charles Mayor Randy Roach, Louisiana Senators Willie Mount and Jerry Theunissen, and State Reps. Ronnie Johns, Chuck Kleckley, Elcie Guillory and Dan Morrish.

Rodríguez stressed that CITGO stands prepared to offer additional assistance.

He also presented officials with a letter from Venezuelan Energy Minister Rafael Ramírez indicating that Venezuela is prepared to offer additional assistance in the form of fuel supplies to help offset shortages.

Ramirez, who also serves as president of the Venezuelan national oil company, PDVSA, stressed that the offer of support for storm victims comes from Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.

President Chávez announced yesterday that Venezuela will send oil and humanitarian aid to the U.S. to help alleviate the effects of the hurricane, which he described as "a catastrophe."

Sources at the Venezuelan Embassy in Washington DC, told Venezuelanalysis.com that apart from the million dollars in monetary assistance, Venezuela is offering two mobile hospital units, each capable of assisting 150 people, 120 specialists in rescue operations, 10 water purifying plants, 18 electricity generators of 850 KW each, 20 tons of bottled water, and 50 tons of canned food.

According to the Embassy, Venezuela's Consulate in New Orleans will remain closed until further notice.

More Venezuelan aid for victims

Yesterday, the Venezuelan Foreign Ministry issued a statement expressing solidarity with the people and government of the United States. "The Venezuelan government and nation express to the United States and its leaders their dismay regarding the magnitude and consequences of Hurricane Katrina," read the statement.

"As a way of expressing its solidarity and sentiments of compassion towards the families of the victims that are facing the loss of their material goods, the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela reiterates the offer made by President Hugo Chavez, of sending fuel and humanitarian aid to the United States..." the statement continued.

U.S. Says unsolicited offers can be "counterproductive"

The U.S. State Department welcomed the willingness of foreign nations to help, but said they do not have information on Venezuela´s offer.

However, according to The Washington Times, a senior State Department official said he was not aware of the Venezuelan offer, but noted that unsolicited offers can be "counterproductive."

Venezuela´s offer comes amid renewed tensions between the United States and the left-wing government of President Hugo Chavez. Washington continuously accuses democratically-elected Chavez of being a threat to stability in Latin America, while Chavez accuses the Bush Administration of wanting to destabilize or overthrow his government.
 
Jul 10, 2002
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Yup, Bush also cut like some 44% of the New Orleans city budget towards the levy maintence and emergency flood relief in order to fund the death of our US troops as well as inflict the genocide over in Iraq...

He's declared martial law, but there's no authority... Know why b/c it's poor minorties in a depressed economy in a depressed region. How is there no aids on deck waiting for after the disaster strikes....

Shoot even after 9/11 FEMA was right there ready to act, but I guess it's b/c they only care about the financial elite, plus people knew about 9/11 much longer than the 72 hour evacuation the southerns had for this storm...

our country is a greater shame more and more everyday
 

Ry

Sicc OG
Apr 25, 2002
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  • Ry

    Ry

I'm really starting to like this Chavez guy. It seems everytime Bush fucks up, Chavez is there to point it out...
 

Mac Jesus

Girls send me your nudes
May 31, 2003
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Even if Chavez was assasinated, his government and party will still live on. He's a folk hero to the people, and he'll inspire Venuzuelan politics for years to come.
 
Sep 28, 2004
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That'd be fucked up if they didn't let someone help us.

" You can't help my country, because, eh.. they might like you more than they like me.. What with me screwing up all over and partying while my people suffer. Dang."
- Bush
 

Mac Jesus

Girls send me your nudes
May 31, 2003
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#13
Fidel Castro Offers to Send 1,100 Cuban Doctors to Help With US Hurricane Relief Efforts

By Anita Snow Associated Press Writer
Published: Sep 2, 2005



HAVANA (AP) - President Fidel Castro announced in a live television broadcast Friday that he had just issued a second offer to the United States to send 1,100 Cuban doctors to help care for the victims of Hurricane Katrina.

"These personnel have international experience and the language skills necessary to attend to patients," Castro said on state television. He said the first 100 doctors have been equipped with backpacks filled with medicine and first aid supplies and are ready to travel as soon as Friday night to Texas, where many of the hurricane victims have been evacuated.

"We are offering life, to save 10, 100, 1,000," said Castro.

The Cuban leader said his government was hoping for a rapid response, "hopefully immediately so as not to lose another minute."

Castro said a diplomatic note containing the offer was sent late Friday afternoon to the U.S. Interests Section, the American mission here, and was the second such offer of its kind made this week.

Castro said the first offer of Cuban doctors for hurricane relief efforts was made during a meeting with Cuban foreign ministry and U.S. officials in Havana on Tuesday, days before the extent of the hurricane's catastrophic damage was known.

At the time, American officials had asked Cuban authorities not to publicize their offer of aid, said Castro.

"(American) authorities are going through a difficult time, we are not asking for anything," said Castro, whose country has not had diplomatic relations with the United States in more than four decades. "We're not criticizing anyone."

But Castro indicated the deepening of the human suffering in New Orleans and other U.S. Gulf Coast cities had compelled him to repeat the offer.

Currently, there are tens of thousands of Cuban doctors working on goodwill missions in developing nations, especially in Venezuela and Haiti, as well as in Africa.

Cuban lawmakers on Thursday held a minute of silence Thursday for Hurricane Katrina victims and expressed solidarity with the mostly impoverished black and Hispanic Americans affected by the devastating storm.

Castro was among more than 500 members of the National Assembly who stood silently at the start of a regular session to remember the hundreds believed to have died this week when Katrina ravaged New Orleans, Louisiana, and other U.S. coastal communities on the Gulf of Mexico.

"This news causes pain and sadness for the Cuban people," said a resolution lawmakers unanimously approved. "In their name, we wish to express our profound solidarity with the people of the United States, state and local authorities and the victims of this catastrophe.

"The entire world should feel this tragedy as if it were their own," it concluded.

Cuba, set in the middle of the western Caribbean sea just southeast of the Gulf of Mexico, is battered by hurricanes annually.
More counterproductive offers...