The Cuban difference
http://flonnet.com/fl2220/stories/20051007004301800.htm
JOHN CHERIAN
The Bush administration goes by politics even in accepting international relief assistance: it rejects an offer of aid from Cuba, which has evolved a reliable hurricane disaster management system.
THE stark images the world saw after the city of New Orleans and the Gulf Coast of the United States was devastated by a hurricane pointed to a new reality. A Category Five hurricane seemingly brought the only remaining superpower in the world to its knees. The Federal government remained paralysed for more than four days.
The U.S. media drew comparisons between the deluge that engulfed Mumbai in the last week of July and the floods in New Orleans. In Mumbai, the Indian Army and Navy units were deployed within 12 hours after heavy rains flooded the city. Although the destruction caused by Hurricane Katrina was more widespread and deadly, the first U.S. Army units arrived in New Orleans only 48 hours after disaster struck. Even then there were not enough personnel to prevent the city from degenerating into a lawless state. The population of New Orleans is less than half a million; official figures put Mumbai's population at around 13 million. There were no instances of looting and lawlessness in the Indian city.
Cuba was hit by a Category Five hurricane in September 2004. The hurricane generated winds at the speed of 250 km/hour. More than 1.5 million Cubans were evacuated from their homes in Havana and surrounding areas immediately after the hurricane warning was given. There was not a single casualty, though 20,000 houses were damaged. Cuba, though a developing country facing tremendous economic problems, has a tried and tested disaster management policy. The Cuban leadership, including President Fidel Castro, go on television and radio days in advance to warn the people to evacuate to higher ground. (It took U.S. President George W. Bush four days after Hurricane Katrina struck to make a public appearance on the national media network.) Since 1995, more than a dozen Category Five hurricanes have hit the island. The damage to life and property has been minimal.
The socialist government in Cuba also sees to it that when its citizens are evacuated from their homes, medical care and food rations are provided. Along with the people, important household items such as refrigerators and cooking implements are taken along. One of the reasons why some people in New Orleans and the Gulf Coast were reluctant to leave was that they were afraid that their property would be looted. However, the bulk of the population in New Orleans could not evacuate because they were poor and without means of transport and money to flee the approaching hurricane. In Cuba, people are not just herded in enclosed sports stadiums and left to their own devices.
The United Nations International Centre Secretariat for Disaster Reduction (ISDR) has cited Cuba as a model for hurricane disaster management. After Hurricane Katrina struck, ISDR director Salvano Briceno said that the Cuban way could easily be replicated in other countries with similar economic conditions and even in "countries with greater resources that do not manage to protect their population as well as Cuba does".
Immediately after Hurricane Katrina struck, Cuba offered to lend its expertise along with medical help for the hundreds of thousands stranded in New Orleans. Cuba announced that it would send 1,000 doctors and 36 tonnes of medicine and equipment to the disaster zone. Castro ordered the doctors to be on stand by near the Havana international airport to board the flight to Louisiana at short notice. To the dismay of the Cuban government and people, the U.S. State Department initially did not even acknowledge the Cuban offer of aid. State Department spokesman Sean McCormack, while reading out the names of the long list of countries that had offered help, pointedly omitted mentioning Cuba. At a media briefing in the first week of September, McCormack said that the Cuban medical brigade was probably not needed in New Orleans and the surrounding areas since "there was a robust response from the American medical community".
In fact, in the days following the destruction of New Orleans, there were only a handful of medical personnel to attend to the stricken people of the city. White House spokesman Scott McClellan expressed his contempt for the offer from Cuba, saying that Fidel Castro should first "offer the people of Cuba their freedom". Only the Republican Senator from Florida, Mel Martinez, had the courtesy to appreciate the Cuban offer. "If we need doctors and Cuba offers them and they provide a good service, then of course we should accept them and we're grateful for that offer," he said. Martinez is of Cuban origin and is a close associate of Florida Governor Jeb Bush, the President's brother.
A group of prominent U.S. physicians criticised Washington's refusal to accept Cuban help. Peter Bourne, former special adviser to President Jimmy Carter and former Assistant Secretary-General of the United Nations, said in early September that there was a "clear need" for more medical help for victims of Katrina. He said: "The Cuban physicians are accustomed to working in difficult Third World conditions without the resources and supplies that most of us are used to. Since they are just an hour away, it is a shame that they have not been allowed to join our committed medical corps already."
http://flonnet.com/fl2220/stories/20051007004301800.htm
JOHN CHERIAN
The Bush administration goes by politics even in accepting international relief assistance: it rejects an offer of aid from Cuba, which has evolved a reliable hurricane disaster management system.
THE stark images the world saw after the city of New Orleans and the Gulf Coast of the United States was devastated by a hurricane pointed to a new reality. A Category Five hurricane seemingly brought the only remaining superpower in the world to its knees. The Federal government remained paralysed for more than four days.
The U.S. media drew comparisons between the deluge that engulfed Mumbai in the last week of July and the floods in New Orleans. In Mumbai, the Indian Army and Navy units were deployed within 12 hours after heavy rains flooded the city. Although the destruction caused by Hurricane Katrina was more widespread and deadly, the first U.S. Army units arrived in New Orleans only 48 hours after disaster struck. Even then there were not enough personnel to prevent the city from degenerating into a lawless state. The population of New Orleans is less than half a million; official figures put Mumbai's population at around 13 million. There were no instances of looting and lawlessness in the Indian city.
Cuba was hit by a Category Five hurricane in September 2004. The hurricane generated winds at the speed of 250 km/hour. More than 1.5 million Cubans were evacuated from their homes in Havana and surrounding areas immediately after the hurricane warning was given. There was not a single casualty, though 20,000 houses were damaged. Cuba, though a developing country facing tremendous economic problems, has a tried and tested disaster management policy. The Cuban leadership, including President Fidel Castro, go on television and radio days in advance to warn the people to evacuate to higher ground. (It took U.S. President George W. Bush four days after Hurricane Katrina struck to make a public appearance on the national media network.) Since 1995, more than a dozen Category Five hurricanes have hit the island. The damage to life and property has been minimal.
The socialist government in Cuba also sees to it that when its citizens are evacuated from their homes, medical care and food rations are provided. Along with the people, important household items such as refrigerators and cooking implements are taken along. One of the reasons why some people in New Orleans and the Gulf Coast were reluctant to leave was that they were afraid that their property would be looted. However, the bulk of the population in New Orleans could not evacuate because they were poor and without means of transport and money to flee the approaching hurricane. In Cuba, people are not just herded in enclosed sports stadiums and left to their own devices.
The United Nations International Centre Secretariat for Disaster Reduction (ISDR) has cited Cuba as a model for hurricane disaster management. After Hurricane Katrina struck, ISDR director Salvano Briceno said that the Cuban way could easily be replicated in other countries with similar economic conditions and even in "countries with greater resources that do not manage to protect their population as well as Cuba does".
Immediately after Hurricane Katrina struck, Cuba offered to lend its expertise along with medical help for the hundreds of thousands stranded in New Orleans. Cuba announced that it would send 1,000 doctors and 36 tonnes of medicine and equipment to the disaster zone. Castro ordered the doctors to be on stand by near the Havana international airport to board the flight to Louisiana at short notice. To the dismay of the Cuban government and people, the U.S. State Department initially did not even acknowledge the Cuban offer of aid. State Department spokesman Sean McCormack, while reading out the names of the long list of countries that had offered help, pointedly omitted mentioning Cuba. At a media briefing in the first week of September, McCormack said that the Cuban medical brigade was probably not needed in New Orleans and the surrounding areas since "there was a robust response from the American medical community".
In fact, in the days following the destruction of New Orleans, there were only a handful of medical personnel to attend to the stricken people of the city. White House spokesman Scott McClellan expressed his contempt for the offer from Cuba, saying that Fidel Castro should first "offer the people of Cuba their freedom". Only the Republican Senator from Florida, Mel Martinez, had the courtesy to appreciate the Cuban offer. "If we need doctors and Cuba offers them and they provide a good service, then of course we should accept them and we're grateful for that offer," he said. Martinez is of Cuban origin and is a close associate of Florida Governor Jeb Bush, the President's brother.
A group of prominent U.S. physicians criticised Washington's refusal to accept Cuban help. Peter Bourne, former special adviser to President Jimmy Carter and former Assistant Secretary-General of the United Nations, said in early September that there was a "clear need" for more medical help for victims of Katrina. He said: "The Cuban physicians are accustomed to working in difficult Third World conditions without the resources and supplies that most of us are used to. Since they are just an hour away, it is a shame that they have not been allowed to join our committed medical corps already."