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U.S. DECLINES offer of 1,500 cuban doctors

 
 
Reply Fri 9 Sep, 2005 07:35 pm
Cuban doctors say politics block Katrina aid offer


09 Sep 2005 19:33:59 GMT
Source: Reuters
By Anthony Boadle

HAVANA, Sept 9 (Reuters) - Cuban doctors put on stand-by a week ago by President Fidel Castro to fly to the aid of the victims of Hurricane Katrina said on Friday they hoped the United States would put politics aside and accept their help.

So far, the word from Washington has been thanks, but no thanks. The White House snubbed Cuba's offer and said Castro would do better "freeing" his Communist-run country.

Meanwhile, the 1,500 doctors are taking English language classes and brushing up on their epidemiological skills.

"We are sad about the position the American government has taken. All of us have been waiting here for eight days," said Dr. Juan Carlos Dupuy, a general practitioner and chemical lab specialist.

"This is a humanitarian problem. We have to put aside politics. We are ready to go," he said.

Castro, calling a truce in Cuba's four-decade-old ideological war with the United States, offered on Sept. 2 to fly the doctors to treat people in the New Orleans disaster.

The Cuban leader said it was no bluff.

He gathered 1,586 physicians at Havana's convention center for a pep talk, each clad in white overalls and equipped with green satchels of medical supplies.

Millions of people were displaced when Katrina hit the U.S. Gulf coast last week, with many of them sick and injured. New Orleans city officials first said they believed the death toll could be as high as 10,000, but a U.S. Homeland Security relief officer said on Friday the number may not be that high.

Some 100 countries -- rich and poor, friend and foe -- ranging from Honduras and Sri Lanka to Germany offered to help U.S. relief efforts.

Venezuela's leftist government, a close Cuban ally with tense ties to Washington, offered at least $1 million to the Red Cross and said it would send an extra one million barrels of gasoline to the U.S. market.

The U.S. State Department said all offers would be considered based on needs rather than political grounds.

But the Bush administration's message to Havana was clear.

"When it comes to Cuba, we have one message for Fidel Castro: He needs to offer the people of Cuba their freedom," White House spokesman Scott McClellan said at a press briefing on Thursday.

Cuba regularly sends medical assistance to other countries hit by natural disasters. Cuban doctors serve in dozens of developing nations.

The contingent on stand-by at an international medical school in Havana includes doctors who worked in Sri Lanka after the tsunami disaster.

"We are waiting for a final decision. We want to help because we saw on television how difficult things are in New Orleans," said Dr. Marcia Consuegra, a cardiologist who served in Ethiopia and currently works in poor hillside slums outside Caracas.

"If they rejects us, it is their loss, because we have no political interest in this," she said. "My English is not good, but my heart is big," she added in broken English.

SOURCE
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Type: Discussion • Score: 1 • Views: 3,455 • Replies: 66
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Merry Andrew
 
  1  
Reply Fri 9 Sep, 2005 07:40 pm
No real surprises there.
0 Replies
 
Acquiunk
 
  1  
Reply Fri 9 Sep, 2005 07:53 pm
Re: U.S. DECLINES offer of 1,500 cuban doctors
JustanObserver wrote:
Cuban doctors put on stand-by a week ago by President Fidel Castro to fly to the aid of the victims of Hurricane Katrina said on Friday they hoped the United States would put politics aside and accept their help


The problem with Fidel's offer is that New Orleans does not need doctors, it needs pumps (and someone who can organize things) and I doubt he has either.
0 Replies
 
Sturgis
 
  1  
Reply Sat 10 Sep, 2005 06:57 am
Close one there! Scanning through quickly it looked like you had said the U.S had declined 1500 Cuban dictators.

The thing is those Cuban doctors could soon become Cuban defectors and seeing as how they are doctors this could create trouble on Wednesday afternoons at already overcrowded golf courses.
0 Replies
 
JustanObserver
 
  1  
Reply Sat 10 Sep, 2005 07:00 am
Re: U.S. DECLINES offer of 1,500 cuban doctors
Acquiunk wrote:
JustanObserver wrote:
Cuban doctors put on stand-by a week ago by President Fidel Castro to fly to the aid of the victims of Hurricane Katrina said on Friday they hoped the United States would put politics aside and accept their help


The problem with Fidel's offer is that New Orleans does not need doctors, it needs pumps (and someone who can organize things) and I doubt he has either.


No. The refugees need doctors AND pumps. Don't tell me that thousands and thousands of people who walked through sewage water with floating dead bodies aren't going to need a doctor.

We have a potential health crisis coming to N.O. It would be foolish to turn away an offer for doctors.
0 Replies
 
Frank Apisa
 
  1  
Reply Sat 10 Sep, 2005 07:03 am
Our relations with Cuba are pathetic....and the reaction of our government to Cuban help is even more pathetic.

But the most pathetic aspect of this thing is the number of Americans who cannot see past their noses on this issue.

Cuba comes out of this particular incident looking big...we come out looking like schoolyard kids.
0 Replies
 
Sturgis
 
  1  
Reply Sat 10 Sep, 2005 07:12 am
We do?
0 Replies
 
Frank Apisa
 
  1  
Reply Sat 10 Sep, 2005 07:15 am
Sturgis wrote:
We do?


Absolutely!
0 Replies
 
Sturgis
 
  1  
Reply Sat 10 Sep, 2005 07:21 am
Oh well as long as I have the Spaldine who cares?
0 Replies
 
AngeliqueEast
 
  1  
Reply Sat 10 Sep, 2005 07:29 am
BM
0 Replies
 
CalamityJane
 
  1  
Reply Sat 10 Sep, 2005 09:21 am
Well Cuba is not the only country that offered help and
hasn't gotten any responses

Quote:
STOCKHOLM, Sweden - For four days, a C-130 transport plane ready to lift supplies to Katrina victims has stood idle at an air base in Sweden. The aid includes a water purification system that may be urgently needed amid signs deadly diseases could be spreading through fetid pools in New Orleans.The one thing that stands in the way of takeoff? Approval by U.S. officials.


http://politics.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050907/ap_on_re_eu/katrina_world
0 Replies
 
Merry Andrew
 
  1  
Reply Sat 10 Sep, 2005 09:32 am
Yeah, I heard that one on the radio, CJ. The complete incompetence, the proliferation of red tape and the mixed signals being sent by those in charge is appalling and almost beyond belief. Here, in my home state of Massachusetts, state officials rushed to ready an Air National Guard base for up to 2,500 evacuees to be brought in from the Gulf. Food was rushed in, platoons of volunteers were standing by, dormitory-type rooms had been spruced up and equipped. And the volunteers just stood by. Then they were told by FEMA, well, maybe we'll send some people, maybe not. You're on hold for now. Two days later, FEMA switched signals again and actually sent a planeload of homeless people, less than half od the air base's capacity. The incompetence of this administration is just unbelieveable.

In the case of Cuba, I can see how it would embarrassing to accept Castro's offer when we've spent two generations painting Castro as a bogeyman. Did we ever accept that offer of oil and $1 m. cash from that other bogeyman, Hugo Chavez of Venezuela?
0 Replies
 
Bi-Polar Bear
 
  1  
Reply Sat 10 Sep, 2005 09:35 am
yes MA it would show a certain sense of maturity to put human suffering above politics. Exactly why it won't happen.
0 Replies
 
littlek
 
  1  
Reply Sat 10 Sep, 2005 09:36 am
MA - the media said that we didn't get displaced NOers (and then later only got a handful) because many didn't want to be placed so far from home.
0 Replies
 
Bi-Polar Bear
 
  1  
Reply Sat 10 Sep, 2005 09:40 am
k, even though I was born in Mass and so much of my family lives (or mostly is buried now) there, I would think twice about coming there simply because the cost of living is so high, so I guess it may be partially understandable that folks might decline the invite. Not to mention if they've been acclimated to a deep south climate from birth Mass would be quite a shock.
0 Replies
 
littlek
 
  1  
Reply Sat 10 Sep, 2005 09:43 am
Looking at the pictures, the crowd off the plane were older and sans kids. Or so it seemed to me. People were quoted as saying they didn't want to break up families and some just said they were finally someplace safe (Houston) and they didn't want another change.
0 Replies
 
Bi-Polar Bear
 
  1  
Reply Sat 10 Sep, 2005 09:47 am
I can't even wrap my mind around how these people must feel... God bless 'em.....
0 Replies
 
CalamityJane
 
  1  
Reply Sat 10 Sep, 2005 09:49 am
No blue, the same answer was given by FEMA to San Diego
volunteers who initially thought to house 600 displaced
New Orleans residents, in addition to the 90 who are already
here, and loving it.

FEMA is an utter disgrace and a slap in the face of every
disaster victim in need.
0 Replies
 
Walter Hinteler
 
  1  
Reply Sat 10 Sep, 2005 10:09 am
Quote:
German plane with Katrina aid turned back from US


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Associated Press, THE JERUSALEM POST Sep. 10, 2005

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

A German military plane, which was carrying 15 tons of emergency rations to survivors of Hurricane Katrina, was turned away by US authorities, officials said Saturday.

The plane was turned back on Thursday because it didn't have the required authorization, a German government spokesman said.

The government spokesman, speaking on customary condition of anonymity, declined to comment on a report in the German news magazine Der Spiegel that that US authorities refused the delivery by arguing that the NATO military rations could carry mad cow disease.

The spokesman said US authorities had since given a green light for any further aid deliveries. He said it was unclear whether there would be more flights from Germany.

A US Embassy official, who asked not to be named, cited temporary technical and logistical problems.

German military planes have flown several loads of rations to the Gulf Coast region. Berlin is also sending teams equipped with high-capacity pumps to help clear floodwaters.
Source

According to the news on radio, a second plane was send back just now.


According to miliary sources at Pensacola in Florida (where the planes landed before the permission was deletd), as quoted by Der Spiegel, photos of 'Care parcels' delivered to the USA wouldn't show a nice picture.

The US-embassady said today that the 'Nato-clearance' for the food now is accepted (well, US soldiers ate them since years in Afghanistan, and more than 45 tons were already delivered to New Orleans), however it's still unclear, if further help flights from Germany will be allowed.
(Which should be regulated soon, since two more planes with further equipment for the 100-men-pump crews are still waiting as well.)
0 Replies
 
Walter Hinteler
 
  1  
Reply Sat 10 Sep, 2005 10:17 am
According to reuters et. al., relief flights from Britain and Russia were also denied entry.
0 Replies
 
 

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