The Guardian (Charlottetown)

France defends its handling of island hurricane preparatio­ns

Nine people killed, locals felt abandoned by authoritie­s

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The French government is defending its handling of hurricane preparatio­ns in the French Caribbean islands of St. Martin and St. Barts, after being criticized by opponents for not preparing enough and by locals who felt abandoned by authoritie­s amid the devastatio­n.

Government spokesman Christophe Castaner, speaking Sunday with Europe1-CNewsLes Echos, said he “perfectly (understood) the anger” of residents after hurricane Irma tore through the islands, killing nine people, destroying houses and cutting off the water supply. Extra troops had to be sent to stop subsequent looting. Another four people were killed on St. Maarten, the Dutch side of St. Martin, the Dutch government reported Sunday.

But Castaner insisted President Emmanuel Macron’s government deployed robust emergency planning methods and sent plenty of equipment to the islands, with emergency help given “first priority.” He said officials had known of the “extremely high risk” days in advance and had mobilized military and health care personnel in nearby Guadeloupe.

Castaner said many islanders were suffering from “an impact of emotional shock, an impact that’s extremely hard psychologi­cally.”

Far-right National Front party leader Marine Le Pen, who lost the presidency to Macron in May, accused the government on Saturday of having “totally insufficie­nt” emergency and security measures in place. The families of stranded island residents have taken to social media networks to voice similar criticism.

Macron held an emergency meeting Saturday about Irma and the approachin­g Hurricane Jose. Prime Minister Edouard Philippe later insisted that the government’s support for Irma’s victims isn’t “empty words.”

“I am aware of the fear, the exhaustion and the anguish that the current situation is causing families in the Antilles and on the mainland,” he said. “We are completely mobilized to rescue, to accompany and to rebuild.”

The criticism comes as Macron’s popularity has been sinking over unpopular domestic policies like reforming labour laws. France’s main electricit­y provider EDF says it transporte­d 140 tons of electrical equipment to the Caribbean to help restore the power supply, since much of the electricit­y across St. Martin and St. Barts was wiped out after hurricane Irma hit Wednesday.

EDF said the equipment — transporte­d from mainland France via two large aircraft — arrived Sunday in neighbouri­ng Guadeloupe. It included 50 generators, motor pumps and flood kits that will be transporte­d to the islands by boat as soon as conditions permit.

Camp beds, sleeping bags and life-saving equipment were also sent to help EDF’s Rapid Electric Interventi­on Force (FIRE) teams, which were arriving from Martinique, Guyana and Corsica to support those already on Guadeloupe.

France’s interior minister said Sunday he shared the relief of many residents in St. Martin and St. Barts that Hurricane Jose spared the islands further devastatio­n.

Gerard Collomb, speaking at a press conference in Paris, said “Jose passed miles from the coasts” and “it did not add what we feared: more difficulti­es.”

Collomb said authoritie­s were now concentrat­ing on getting the one million tons of water that has been delivered into the hands of residents on the islands. He added that restoring security — after reports that some shops were looted — is a priority for police and soldiers.

Collomb also dismissed as false a report that prison inmates on the Dutch part of St. Martin had escaped amid the devastatio­n.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Damaged palm fronds lay on Baie Orientale beach, after the passing of hurricane Irma, in Saint Martin, Sunday. Irma cut a path of devastatio­n across the northern Caribbean, leaving thousands homeless after destroying buildings and uprooting trees....
AP PHOTO Damaged palm fronds lay on Baie Orientale beach, after the passing of hurricane Irma, in Saint Martin, Sunday. Irma cut a path of devastatio­n across the northern Caribbean, leaving thousands homeless after destroying buildings and uprooting trees....

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