The Manila Times

Trump defends relief response to Puerto Rico

- AFP

WASHINGTON, D. C.: US President Donald Trump defended the government relief response to hurricane-ravaged Puerto Rico on Tuesday (Wednesday in Manila) and promised to visit the island next week.

Trump also said that he would travel to the US Virgin Islands, another American territory in the Caribbean that was slammed by a pair of powerful storms.

“Both have been devastated, and I mean absolutely devastated,” the president told reporters at a joint press conference with Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy.

“Puerto Rico got hit by two hurricanes. . . And they were among biggest we’ve ever seen.”

Relief efforts were complicate­d by the fact that it is an island, which now faces a “long and very, Trump said.

Before Maria struck last week, Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands were also hit by Hurricane Irma—which killed at least 112 people, 72 of whom were in Florida, according to an updated death toll released Tuesday.

Rejecting accusation­s Puerto Rico has not received the same level of assistance as storm-hit US states Florida and Texas, Trump said a “massive relief effort is underway.”

Trump said he had ordered all relevant agencies and the military to do “everything in their power” to help residents of Puerto Rico.

“We are unloading on an hourly basis massive loads of water and food and supplies for Puerto Rico,” the president said, adding that he would visit there on Tuesday.

Coast Guard and US Navy vessels—were taking part in the relief effort, bringing generators, food and water.

The USNS Comfort, a 1,000-bed hospital ship based in Virginia, was also headed for Puerto Rico.

‘Life or death’

Most of the 3.4 million people in the overwhelmi­ngly Hispanic US territory in the Caribbean are without running water, electricit­y and communicat­ions following Hurricanes Irma and Maria.

Food, water and fuel are scarce, residents to issue increasing­ly desperate appeals for help.

“It’s life or death,” said Carmen Yulin Cruz, mayor of the capital San Juan.

“People are really dying,” the mayor of the city of nearly 400,000 people told CBS News. “There are people that have had no food and no water for 14 days.”

tweeting repeatedly over the weekend about American football players kneeling during the national anthem while failing to mention Puerto Rico.

Singer Marc Anthony, who was born in New York of Puerto Rican parents, told Trump in a tweet with an expletive thrown in to stop talking about the National Football League and “do something about our people in need in #PuertoRico.”

“We are American citizens too,” Anthony said.

Appealing for “swift action” from the Trump administra­tion and US Congress, Puerto Rico Governor Ricardo Rossello also felt the need to issue a reminder—twice— that Puerto Ricans are US citizens.

Rossello stressed that the devastatio­n from the “unpreceden­ted disaster” was “vast.”

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