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Trump vows '100 percent' support for storm-battered Carolinas![]() Governor blames 'colonialism' for US's poor Puerto Rico hurricane response Miami (AFP) Sept 20, 2018 - One year after Hurricane Maria slammed into Puerto Rico, the island's governor blamed US "colonialism" for delays in receiving aid and the weak emergency response to the disaster that left nearly 3,000 people dead. "Puerto Rico is a colonial territory," and therein lies the "inherent difficulty," Rosello said in an interview with local radio WKAQ 580, as commemoration ceremonies for the hurricane victims were under way. Puerto Ricans are US citizens, but since the island is a US territory they cannot vote in national elections, and are represented in Congress only by a non-voting representative. Rosello complained that bureaucratic dealings with the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) "have been excessive," and said the response by the Army Corps of Engineers -- which sent personnel to the island days after the hurricane struck to re-establish electrical power -- "was insufficient" and "lacked urgency." He compared the sluggish response last year to the quick federal responses in Texas and Florida, states hit weeks earlier by hurricanes Harvey and Irma, as well as the federal response to 2005's Hurricane Katrina in the US Gulf of Mexico. "Why are there bureaucratic processes here that were addition to those in Florida and Texas?" he asked. "And why, when Katrina struck, did they pay 100 percent of the emergency work and they did not extend this to Puerto Rico?" Bitter debates still rage over the failings of the US government's response to the Category 4 storm in Puerto Rico and the terrible human toll it took. Maria destroyed Puerto Rico's electricity grid, leaving the island largely without power for weeks and crippling its health care system. The local government decreed a day of mourning to remember hurricane victims on Thursday. Flags fluttered at half mast across the island and in Florida, where many Puerto Ricans who fled the hurricane moved to live.
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US President Donald Trump toured storm-battered areas of the Carolinas on Wednesday, handing out meals to residents and promising the "100 percent" support of the federal government to victims of Hurricane Florence.
"Washington is with you. Trump is with you," the president said during a briefing at emergency operations headquarters in Conway, South Carolina.
Trump began his tour of the storm-damaged region in worst-hit North Carolina, flying into Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point aboard Air Force One.
"Some of the flooding is actually epic," Trump said at a news conference. "We've seen all the pictures where houses are literally covered beyond the roof."
From Cherry Point, Trump traveled to New Bern, North Carolina, a town at the confluence of the Neuse and Trent rivers that suffered severe flooding.
"We're giving you a lot of help," Trump told one resident as he walked along River Drive in a low-lying neighborhood of New Bern made up of brick and clapboard houses.
Trump pledged federal assistance as the Carolinas begin the long recovery from a storm estimated to have caused billions of dollars in damage and left dozens dead.
"Whatever we have to do at the federal level we'll be there," Trump said. "We will be there 100 percent."
The president offered his condolences for the nearly 40 people killed by the storm.
"America grieves with you and our hearts break for you... We will never forget your loss, we will never leave your side. We are with you all the way," he said.
- 'Gut punch' -
North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper said his state took a "gut punch" from Florence, which made landfall on the coast as a Category 1 hurricane on Friday and drenched some parts of the state with 40 inches (one meter) of rain.
"Our people are still reeling... Our rivers are still cresting and there is still danger for some people," he added.
Cooper said farmers in the state had suffered significant losses to crops, while major roads remained flooded and thousands of people were still without power.
"We have weathered storms before in our state but we have never seen one like this," Cooper said. "It has been epic, disastrous and widespread. It is a storm like no other."
The governor told Trump the state could "come back stronger than ever" but would need the president's help.
"We've got a long road ahead in the days, months and even years ahead to make sure we build back to where we need to be in North Carolina," he said.
Following the news conference Trump joined the governor handing out meals in styrofoam containers to North Carolina residents and asking how they were doing.
During the tour of New Bern, Trump stopped in front of a brick house which had a large boat wash up in its yard and engaged in a conversation with the owner of the home, an older man.
"Is this your boat?" Trump asked.
After the owner said no, Trump replied: "At least you got a nice boat out of the deal."
"I think it's incredible what we're seeing," Trump said. "This boat just came here.
"They don't know whose boat that is," he added. "What's the law? Maybe it becomes theirs."
- $2 million from Michael Jordan -
During the briefing at the Marine Corps base Trump asked a state official how a region of North Carolina called Lake Norman had been impacted.
Told it was doing fine, Trump said: "I love that area. I can't tell you why, but I love that area."
The Trump National Golf Club is located on the shores of Lake Norman.
NBA legend Michael Jordan, a North Carolina native, announced meanwhile he was donating $2 million to help with recovery efforts from the hurricane.
Jordan, who owns the National Basketball Association's Charlotte Hornets, grew up in Wilmington, near where Florence made landfall.
"You gotta take care of home," Jordan told The Charlotte Observer newspaper.
"Wilmington truly is my home," the former Chicago Bulls star added. "When it's home, that's tough to swallow."
Jordan donated $1 million to the American Red Cross and another $1 million to the Foundation for the Carolinas Florence Response Fund, the Observer said.
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