Stabroek News

Wealthy nations have a responsibi­lity to help rebuild storm-hit Barbuda: PM

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UNITED NATIONS, ( Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Rich nations responsibl­e for climate change need to help rebuild the Caribbean island of Barbuda where living conditions remain “primitive” more than two months after Hurricane Irma, Antigua and Barbuda Prime Minister Gaston Browne said yesterday.

Ahead of a United Nations summit where countries will be invited to pledge donations to Caribbean nations ravaged by storms, Browne said he hoped at least half of the estimated $ 220 million needed to rebuild Barbuda could be raised.

“You have people who are living there notwithsta­nding the fact that you don’t have basic services. They’re living there under very primitive conditions,” Browne said in an interview.

“We are the injured party, we’re not the ones who are emitting these greenhouse gases into the earth’s atmosphere,” he said at a press conference ahead of the interview.

Irma, packing 185 mph (295 kph) winds, ravaged a series of small islands in the northeast Caribbean in early September, with climate scientists saying warmer air and water resulting from climate change may have added to the storm’s severity.

The dual-island nation of Antigua and Barbuda, with a population of 100,000, was especially hard hit.

The northernmo­st island, Barbuda, normally home to about 1,800 people, was “decimated” and temporaril­y uninhabita­ble, with 95 percent of all dwellings leveled, Browne said.

So far, promised donations to Antigua and Barbuda of some $25 million represent about 10 percent of funds needed to rebound, said Browne. Pledges have come from Britain, the United Arab Emirates, India, and China among others.

“There’s no water, no electricit­y, and there’s no functionin­g police station or ... fire station,” said Browne.

“We are building a new Codrington,” he added, referring to Barbuda’s main town before the storm which will be rebuilt further inland to prevent flooding.

Browne said he was deeply saddened after surveying Irma’s damage by helicopter but he has since been consumed by the daunting task of ensuring Barbuda recovers despite estimated costs equal to the country’s entire government­al revenue.

Browne said he hoped rich countries pledge half of what is needed at Tuesday’s summit, which is held by CARICOM, the Caribbean’s largest cooperatio­n group, and the United Nations.

Countries that have said they would attend Tuesday’s donors summit include the United States, Canada, China, Brazil and several European Union nations, said Browne.

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