Gulf News

Trump calls officials after flaying San Juan mayor

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President Donald Trump spoke by phone with senior officials in hurricane-devastated Puerto Rico late on Saturday, hours after lashing out at the mayor of San Juan who had pleaded for help and criticised the slow federal response.

Trump, who spent the weekend at his Bedminster golf resort in New Jersey, accused Puerto Ricans via Twitter of wanting “everything to be done for them”, even as criticism grew that federal relief efforts amid massive hurricane damage have fallen desperatel­y short.

While much of the US territory of 3.4 million remained without power, fresh water or communicat­ions links long after the catastroph­ic passage of Hurricane Maria, reports continued to filter in of battered towns across the island that have yet to receive any aid.

Enormous, hours-long queues grew at San Juan gas stations — some patrolled by private security guards — while desperate residents in the interior said reporters were the first outsiders they had seen. “There’s been no help from Fema [Federal Emergency Management Agency] nor from the federal government nor from anyone,” said Elisa Gonzalez, 49.

But Trump insisted on Saturday that federal emergency response teams and the US military, which has sent dozens of ships and some 10,000 troops, were doing a “fantastic” job.

Criticised for focusing more on protests by profession­al football players than on the disaster in the Caribbean, the White House said the President spoke late Saturday by phone with Puerto Rico Governor Ricardo Rossello, former governor Luis Fortuno, and Jennifer Gonzalez-Colon, who represents the island in Congress but has no voting power.

Trump also spoke with Kenneth Mapp, the governor of the US Virgin Islands — also hard-hit by Hurricane Maria — and Fema administra­tor head Brock Long, who briefed him “on the progress of current response and recovery operations and provided details about the situation on the ground”.

In his tweets Trump attempted to blame the island’s continuing woes on Democrats, the media and local officials.

After San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulin Cruz complained in impassione­d remarks that “we are dying here, and I cannot fathom the thought that the greatest nation in the world cannot figure out logistics for a small island”, Trump unleashed a Twitter rant.

“The Mayor of San Juan, who was very compliment­ary only a few days ago, has now been told by the Democrats that you must be nasty to Trump,” he wrote.

“Such poor leadership ability by the Mayor of San Juan, and others in Puerto Rico, who are not able to get their workers to help. They want everything to be done for them when it should be a community effort. 10,000 Federal workers now on Island doing a fantastic job.”

Puerto Ricans are US citizens but due to the territory’s status do not vote in presidenti­al elections and have no real voice in Congress.

 ?? AFP ?? People wade into the San Lorenzo River after a bridge was swept away by Hurricane Maria in Morovis, on Thursday. US military and emergency relief teams ramped up their aid efforts for Puerto Rico amid growing criticism of the response to storms.
AFP People wade into the San Lorenzo River after a bridge was swept away by Hurricane Maria in Morovis, on Thursday. US military and emergency relief teams ramped up their aid efforts for Puerto Rico amid growing criticism of the response to storms.
 ?? AFP ?? People line up to buy ice at a local plant in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria, in Arecibo, Puerto Rico, on Thursday.
AFP People line up to buy ice at a local plant in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria, in Arecibo, Puerto Rico, on Thursday.
 ?? AFP ?? View of a house destroyed by Maria, in Vega Baja, on Thursday. Puerto Rico is sunk by a $73 billion debt.
AFP View of a house destroyed by Maria, in Vega Baja, on Thursday. Puerto Rico is sunk by a $73 billion debt.

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