After Puerto Rico Raises Official Hurricane María Death Toll to Almost 3,000, White House Says Trump ‘Remains Proud’ About Federal Response

Aug 29, 2018
5:20 PM
Originally published at Latin America News Dispatch

PUERTO RICO: On Tuesday, Governor Ricardo Rosselló raised the official death toll from Hurricane María from 64 to 2,975, following the results released by an independent study from George Washington University’s Milken Institute School of Public Health. In a statement, White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said President Donald Trump “remains proud of all of the work the Federal family undertook to help our fellow citizens in Puerto Rico.” Trump had been criticized for saying shortly after the storm, when the official death toll was 16, that Hurricane Maria had not been  “a real catastrophe like Katrina.”

On Wednesday afternoon, Trump addressed the federal response to Puerto Rico. He did not mention news of 2,975 lives lost.

Rosselló said he will create a registry of vulnerable people who could be affected by the next hurricane. It would include the elderly, the bedridden and kidney dialysis patients. A commission to study the hurricane response will also be created as the study found that government emergency plans before María were not designed for hurricanes greater than a Category 1: María was a Category 4 with 154 mph winds.

HEADLINES FROM THE WESTERN HEMISPHERE

NORTH AMERICA

MEXICO: The Federal Police announced Tuesday that a man who allegedly participated in the disappearance of 43 students in Ayotzinapa in 2014 has been arrested. Authorities only referred to the man as Juan Miguel “N” and said he was known under the alias “El Pajarraco,” the big bird, and that he was the driver of the car that, according to the official version, took the students to the landfill where they were killed and their bodies were incinerated. International experts and the students’ families do not believe this is what happened and have said it is scientifically impossible for the bodies to have been completely burned to nothing in that landfill.

THE CARIBBEAN

HAITI: Hundreds of protesters rallied last Friday outside the Anti-Corruption Court in Port-au-Prince to demand an investigation into corruption related to the PetroCaribe initiative. Last year, the Haitian parliament published a report saying former senior officials had diverted funds from PetroCaribe, a Venezuelan program that supplies cheap crude oil to Caribbean and Central American nations, but no one has been prosecuted. President Jovenel Moïse said yesterday that the investigation into the diversion of PetroCaribe funds will be a priority.

CENTRAL AMERICA

EL SALVADOR: The director of the National Civil Police announced that more than 400 gang members of the Mara Salvatrucha, also known as the MS-13, were arrested during nation-wide raids. Those arrested were allegedly involved in extortion, drug trafficking, ordering the killings of police officers and included an evangelical pastor who gave gang members false community service certificates.

NICARAGUA: Several former Sandinista cadres that have since turned against President Daniel Ortega have been arrested or kidnapped by loyalist paramilitaries and then turned in to authorities in the past few days, according to non-government organizations and the opposition. The former army officers and political figures are being accused terrorism and organized crime, the Nicaraguan Center for Human Rights said, but authorities have not issued information about the arrests or court proceedings.

THE ANDES

COLOMBIA: The National Electoral Council closed an investigation against former president Juan Manuel Santos for allegedly receiving illegal financing from Brazilian construction firm Odebrecht for his 2014 reelection campaign after it reached statutory limits.

SOUTHERN CONE

BRAZIL: President Michel Temer announced that he is deploying the military to the northern state of Roraima on the Venezuelan border, after new data showed a surge in murders. Criminal organizations have been battling for territory in Roraima in the past three years and the influx of Venezuelan immigrants has put pressure on the local institutions of this poor state. Data from the Violence Monitor showed Roraima has gone from having the third-lowest homicide rate in the country in 2016 to not even appearing in the top ten in 2017 to having the highest homicide rate in the first semester of 2018. A small contingent of elite troops was sent to the border town of Pacaraima after locals attacked Venezuelan refugees, and now an unannounced number of soldiers will be stationed along the border and federal roads of Roraima for two weeks.

BRAZIL: On Monday, Prosecutors filed an old corruption accusation against Fernando Haddad, the vice-presidential candidate for the Worker’s Party and probable leader if jailed former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva is barred from running. The accusation says Haddad received indirect payments to his 2012 campaign for São Paulo mayor from a construction company, but Haddad argued yesterday that he cancelled a multimillion dollar project with that company after an employee alerted him that it was overcharging the government. Haddad said, as Lula has said many times before, that corruption accusations are being used to prevent the Worker’s Party from retaking power.

GOT NEWS? Send the editors tips, articles and other items for inclusion in Today in Latin America to tips@latindispatch.com.

Subscribe to Today in Latin America by Email