Hurricane Maria and Cyclone Ockhi: A tale of two discriminatory and ill-prepared governments

While thousands of people are still without electricity more than eight months after Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico, the blame game continued in India after Cyclone Ockhi hit Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Lakshadweep and adjoining areas. Keeping the mismanagement of natural disasters protocol aside, the weather authorities and state governments refused to take responsibility of putting lives at risk and inability to respond to calls of distress once the cyclone hit.

 
Cyclone Okhi
 
Hurricane Maira Countries around the world continue to ignore the victims and survivors of natural disasters and conveniently brushing the death toll and missing people under the carpet. The signs of discrimination against its own population became even more evident when the newest study in a reputed journal exposed the “official death toll” of Hurricane Maria.
 
Hurricane Maria hit Puerto Rico, USA, last year and the official death toll continues to linger between 64-112. In a recent survey by Harvard University and other institutions in the New England Journal of Medicine, they have estimated that 4645 people died in the hurricane and its aftermath.
 
The number of excess deaths related to Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico is more than 70 times the official estimate according to the journal. The authors laid out the details of their survey online and said, “We estimated that the mortality rate (the number of deaths per 1000 people per unit time) remained high for months after the hurricane. This suggests that people continued to suffer even after the hurricane passed. Our data suggests that about one-third of those that died after the hurricane died from delayed or interrupted medical care, as reported by the surveyed households. Even the low-bound of our estimates is consistent with earlier academic and press reports about the high mortality rate. Our analysis suggests that between 793 and 8498 people died after the hurricane and up to the end of 2017, either directly or indirectly due to the hurricane. We provide a 95 per cent confidence interval of 793 to 8498, and 4645 falls in the middle of this range and that’s how we reached that number.”
 
A report by Vox says that President Donald Trump visited Puerto Rico in October nearly two weeks after the storm hit and the official death count was just 16. He termed it as not a real catastrophe and proud of what’s taken place in Puerto Rico.
 
“These numbers … underscore the inattention of the US government to the frail infrastructure of Puerto Rico,” the authors wrote in the New England Journal of Medicine. Puerto Rican officials have refused to make basic mortality statistics public.
 
CNN surveyed half the total number of funeral homes in Puerto Rico in November, even though many communication channels were disrupted. Funeral home directors identified 499 deaths they considered to be hurricane-related.
 
Thousands of people are still without electricity more than eight months after Hurricane Maria.
 
The discrimination against its own population and the refusal to provide adequate support and facilities doesn’t stop there. The blame game continued in India after Cyclone Ockhi hit Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Lakshadweep and adjoining areas. Keeping the mismanagement of natural disasters protocol aside, the weather authorities and state governments refused to take responsibility of putting lives at risk and inability to respond to calls of distress once the cyclone hit.
 
In a report by DNA, “The IMD blamed the Kerala state government for not acting in time and disseminating the alert information because of which lives were lost. The meteorological department claimed that it sent six alerts to the Kerala government thus “the onus was on the Kerala government to take necessary precautionary measures.” The officials of Kerala government, however, alleged there was no specific cyclone warning but only ‘depression’ alert, which is issued some 2,000 times a year by the IMD and “are taken as a joke by the fishermen.”
 
We had carried a report in January this year informing that 650 fishermen from the coastal areas are still missing. The central government had admitted that the number of missing fishermen is 661. Central Minister of Defence Nirmala Sitharaman told the parliament on December 27 that 261 people from Kerala and 400 from Tamil Nadu were missing.
 
Father Eugene Pereira, vicar general of the Archdiocese of Trivandrum, had said the state’s communist-led government continues to ignore the church’s data, forcing the church to think of legal action against the state’s failure to find missing people or admit them as missing.
 
Church officials are calling for a judicial commission to probe authorities’ failure to ensure timely rescue operations. “We are in the process of initiating all the possible legal steps to peruse our rights,” Father Pereira said.
 
Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan distributed bank cheques of 2.2 million rupees (US$35,000) each to 29 families of the victims. He said the same amount of compensation will be given to families of all victims “irrespective of whether the fisherman is dead or still missing.”
 

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