Trump to visit devastated Puerto Rico
October 3, 2017The Caribbean island nation of Puerto Rico is still reeling from the effects of a massive hurricane that rocked it on September 20. The US territory suffered a total collapse of infrastructure that left several dead and millions without power, telephone service, access to transportation, food and water.
Government officials who described the situation as "apocalyptic” have not updated the death toll, which currently stands at 16, since last week, simply because the situation is so chaotic. Much higher numbers of dead are expected as a more complete overview of the situation becomes possible. Hurricane Maria was the strongest storm to hit the island in 90 years.
Humanitarian crisis
The storm has turned into a humanitarian crisis that local leaders have been slow to master despite help from the US military and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). That situation has only fueled Puerto Rican assertions that the US sees the island, which is a US territory, as a home to second class citizens. Puerto Rican residents are US citizens but they are not allowed to vote in US elections. Residents have pointed to more comprehensive assistance for Texas and Florida in the wake of hurricanes that blasted both US states in the weeks prior to Maria to bolster those assertions.
Read more: Trump administration and Puerto Rico officials clash over hurricane relief
Addressing questions about the pace of US relief efforts, John Rabin, acting administrator for the FEMA division that oversees Puerto Rico said: "It's not that it was ‘slow'; it's ‘complex,' is the way I would describe it.”
Hurricane Donald
The island nation has also borne the brunt of a wholly different type of storm over the course of the last two weeks, namely a tweet storm unleashed by US President Donald Trump. After Carmen Yulin Cruz, the mayor of Puerto Rico's capital San Juan, asked for help and dared criticize the slow US response to the crisis she became the object of Trump's infamous temper. The US president has released no fewer than 18 tweets regarding Puerto Rico, many criticizing the mayor's "poor leadership abilities,” and repeatedly decrying "Fake News” and even blaming the Democratic party for smearing US relief efforts.
Read more:As Puerto Rico awaits Hurricane Maria relief, Donald Trump takes to Twitter
It is not clear whether Trump will meet with Mayor Yulin Cruz during his Tuesday visit, though he will no doubt meet the territory's governor, Ricardo Rossello.
Underwater
The island nation has also been in dire financial straits for some time, owing the US government some $70 million (64 million euros). Due to its special status, however, the island cannot declare bankruptcy. Early estimates are that the country will need more than $60 million for reconstruction after the storm.
Read more: Puerto Rico files for bankruptcy-like case to cut massive debt
js/rc (dpa, Reuters)