2004 Press Releases
U.S. Committed to Reconstruction of Caribbean Nations Affected by Hurricanes
October 8, 2004
The
United States Government through the U.S. Agency for International
Development (USAID) is committed to assist countries in the Caribbean
in their reconstruction efforts, after the recent destruction caused by
hurricanes Ivan and Jeanne.
The approval of the reconstruction
package would boost total U.S. contributions to Caribbean relief
efforts to $63.3 million according to Adolfo Franco, assistant
administrator for Latin America and the Caribbean at the U.S. Agency
for International Development (USAID). Franco explained that these
monies would be in addition to -- not subtracted from -- the $230
million that the United States pledged in July to finance the
reconstruction of Haiti.
The United States has responded very
quickly to the recent hurricanes and tropical storms that devastated
Haiti and other Caribbean nations, allocating over $13 million to
support humanitarian and reconstruction efforts, Franco said.
In
October 1 remarks at the Foreign Press Center in Washington, Franco
noted that the United States has already provided approximately $5
million in assistance to the Caribbean and redirected an additional
$8.6 million to support relief efforts in the region. He pointed out
that, as part of a comprehensive U.S. response to the series of
hurricanes and tropical storms that recently hit the region, President
Bush also has requested an additional $50 million in supplemental
spending to fund a reconstruction aid package for the Caribbean.
Of
the $13.3 million in regional humanitarian and reconstruction
assistance already identified, $5.3 million has been earmarked for
Haiti, $3.3 million for Grenada, $4.2 million for Jamaica, $400,000 for
the Bahamas and $50,000 each for the Dominican Republic and Cuba.
Franco said that the focus of USAID's relief efforts is to ensure that
the basic necessities -- namely, water and food -- are provided and
medical care is given to those individuals who need it most.
One
of the areas most acutely affected by the recent series of hurricanes
and tropical storms is Gonaives, Haiti, where over 2,000 people are
dead or missing as a result of flooding, according to Haitian officials.
Franco
said establishing adequate secure distribution centers for relief
supplies as one of his agency's biggest challenges in Gonaives. He said
that USAID is working very hard to achieve this goal, and that the
distribution process in Gonaives is improving, in part through
cooperation with the nongovernmental organization CARE.
Franco's
colleague at USAID, William Garvelink, added that USAID's ability to
provide food in Gonaives continues to expand as the agency's two
initial distribution sites have grown to seven or eight, thus allowing
USAID to reach most affected areas with food assistance.
Garvelink,
USAID's deputy assistant administrator for democracy, conflict and
humanitarian assistance, said that USAID personnel have focused thus
far on emergency relief. In addition to food assistance, shelter
materials to cover damaged homes or supplies, and water and sanitation
equipment are being provided. Health care is also being supplement by
mobile medical teams. Garvelink said his office will begin to focus a
bit more on moving rehabilitation efforts forward.
Franco characterized the overall U.S. response to the devastation in Haiti as "very, very rapid and very comprehensive."