Transcripts For ALJAZ The Stream 2017 Ep 199 20171213 : comp

Transcripts For ALJAZ The Stream 2017 Ep 199 20171213



there but gentlemen it is really good to have you judy and i'm just looking at a tweet that you shared on the tenth of december just a couple of days ago today nearly three months since i finally have power while i'm very excited and the still keep in mind that the u.s. virgin islands still does not have power no one should have to live in these conditions so young things must change and we exist the famous hash tag that went viral. various homes with were crossed in the caribbean but all of the focus was on the mainland of the u.s. and nobody was paying any attention to the cabbie and i and say us a hello people we're out here so what is it like three most often these. devastating hurricanes went by what is your daily life like where you can see that there are going to still have an impact on the scene for us well. just to be clear there are a very large amount of things has not improved in the virgin islands such as the you know only a few days ago i got power but you know and like i said it's ridiculous that people are having to live this reality for so long but you know almost sadly people have become used to this we've had to live in these conditions so long i've become used to seeing downed power lines and poles on the sides and through some of the streets to the point where it's almost cause car accidents i'm used to having a big hole in a part of my ceiling in my kitchen i'm used to there being you know broken trees on the sides of the road driving past and seeing pieces of governess roofing on the sides of the road and this is it's really unfortunate that this is something that we have to face every day you know just the other day the legislature and the governor were trying to deal with the issue of getting rid of the vegetation debris on that still are on the island that's something that still hasn't been dealt with and over in st john and st thomas which got worse on damage in some situations they have piles and piles of trash and debris just lining up the sides of the roads almost like a barricade. and that's really unfortunate because when these things finally get changed it almost surprises us because we you know we almost are noticing that these things are there anywhere because we've become so accustomed to it. minutes so what's a realistic timeline for the people who are. just simply out to say ok they're mostly on t.v. now because they had to be evacuated but what is a realistic time why so much devastation in such a short period of time watch they released it will be hoping for. well thank you rest of all let me say now that we have approximately by the end of this week about three hundred baht mutants will be back into bob you know. we have hopes of course the government is up to take the initiative you know not we had a call and so we're about to do everything ourselves apart from the donations that we've gotten and the grant aid that we have been pledged to us rehab approximately three hundred by the end of this week by putin so a pullback we've repeated at least close to thirty roofs so the islanders clean up in terms of the roads and the dip and so on it's also declared safe by the environment and it departments we have to clean it up and so not just made it easier for us we have expected an oil so to have a number of people who've been oh lady and say here who three weeks moving out of one of the stadiums complete you'd ever been used as a shell it would be moving back we have ramped up the work chimes of repairing the level of want to let the two groups under homes and repair into his homes so i think it's realistic to say but by the end of the year we. might see on brussels back in but you know the electricity has been up now for several weeks we can't operate all of it because there's not enough power to use the water has been up and running we have. presently it's costing us in antigua about fifty dollars and us at the just means we have had to do level of vote of vote shelters so far has been really good it had a visit from the u.n. secretary general as you might have no one and we also had a visit as recent as a month ago from prince jobs and recently about a week ago we had. our come cuba's summit road kustra was here a number of the car come heads were here and some visits were made to the shell the so i think we've done a terrific job in terms of looking out for the folks in and to go in now with the men back to bob you've previously. so you mentioned that electricity is not available at all times because of the power load in need and needing to make sure that that's spread evenly this is also the case in puerto rico we got this tweet from angela she writes morning from puerto rico strong woman holding it down for sure eighty two days still no power she goes on to say life has changed dramatically i literally do not keep food at home i only sleep in my home due to that lack of power for warm showers food and moral support i can go to my parents' house about ten minutes away but we have no idea when power will be restored in my area they won't tell us who you know when you hear tweets like this and messages like this what what do you think how representative is the angela story but those who are in puerto rico well if you're on my facebook you'll find that most of the people have the same issue i just read someone one of my friends was not so abraded pointing out that had she had been one hundred days without electricity so it's it's become part of the living but there he go you know i have my partner just got electricity about two weeks ago and electricity comes and goes the government doesn't really know how much electricity it has because just basing its you know its estimates on generation but when they were starting to look at specifically households they they thought they would have they. and percent of households also had electricity and this is mainly come close and that it is so one if you go to the middle of the island this situation is really where it's all and and part of what's interesting about this is that this is not necessarily about my yeah like my mate is worse but over a year ago we had three days of no electricity because our power grid has not been invested in by the government or by the u.s. government over the over fifty years. for people who haven't had that experience of losing power first significant amount of time don't explain how people are living in puerto rico right now. it's it's very weird because i was there i was there for the year again and i was there for three weeks and as the gentleman was was saying it becomes a very normal way of life it's a very difficult way of life but it becomes a formal way of life everything becomes slower i remember just having to find water from wherever i could find it just finding why every space had a little bit of electricity so i could plug myself in when it comes to just you know basic movement and i don't have children i cannot imagine people that have children and what that means because you know you become very very cognizant of what he's basically said and having having a refrigerator where you can have you know things that are maintained and not have to waste money every day i'm just having to restock your your refrigerator becomes very important so it becomes normal but it's a very it's it's a normal a mystery and it's a very sad normal ambassador when you see pictures of dominica immediately after the hurricane damage just to be appearing like how do you come back to that kind of devastation what is the last few months been like full dominica well you know most of all i want to thank you very much for keeping us in the media keeping the impact of the hurricane in the caribbean in front of the world's attention i can tell you the day i stepped out and immediately you just couldn't recognize those places because the trees was true and only good well known as the nature of the caribbean last green farmers it was wrenching to just just we come and what room for the streets and fallen trees and the kind of divest station but you know the good thing it's a long way to go but it's getting better the last time i looked out my window i saw all the trees all green and you know. we started looking once again like the nature because we have seen some of the vision of the trees although there are still a lot of forests that we've lost but we can see progress being made and as a citizen on we go but it's getting better and i think people online from what we're seeing say they're also seeing progress but they think that not enough is happening and they think that the blame lies maybe outside of the region this is john wilson she tweeted and i've seen numerous politicians pundits celebs repeatedly appeal for assistance for say puerto rico and provide stats on recovery not so for the u.s. virgin islands i'm even reached out to my senator for progress on support for u.s. virgin islands no response let's get u.s. virgin islands recovery trending to julian do you feel like you're being ignored. well i wouldn't want to put porter puerto rico on the spot because i know i'm puerto rico did get a very large amount of damage while coming out to maria we did notice that they were mainly covering a lot of news sources were mainly covering on puerto rico because it was like the first major hurricane to hit even though what i thought was significant was we were hit by a major hurricane like two weeks before i think the situation was still worse with both puerto rico and the virgin islands with both maria and we still heard more coverage of not only the states like the u.s. states that were barely affected by the storms but we heard more coverage of like other islands or other areas that might be hit we heard more coverage of like the hurricane that might might have hit ireland or was about to hit ireland and you know it's something that something that's ridiculous to me because including i think including puerto rico there's over three million people americans u.s. citizens that got affected by this hurricane much and i saw news coming out of that why do you think why do you think this is because i think this is a big take away from what happened this year and in previous years ago and how we can see things where people pay attention when i get it why do you think that is. well personally for me the first thing i want to point out is that this is probably this is one of the worst arkansas ever seen hit st croix and from my recollection this is the worst hurricane season we've ever had because not only did st crane see john get buffeted by these storms but synchro also took on so much damage that one island couldn't simply help the other because we were just completely devastated. i think part of it is this is a long standing thing the virgin islands is celebrating their one hundredth year on to the u.s. this year and twenty seventeen and we have been neglected from the time that we were brought and i broccoli our people were pushed all my under us control that's actually like one of the reason i want to be in politics as a career and this is one of the main reasons why i want to is because i want to make things like this get changed and get fixed it's actually my senior thesis this year as our status issues because issues like this result and the u.s. giving virtually no coverage of us on you know responding in a very very late way because even though people are happy that fema came down an army corps of engineers came down on that other community groups it took a weeks before we got any kind of assistance like that it took me it probably took over a month before i saw on power companies doing anything or you know any serious changes being made on the island and i think that would never happen on in the states we know with katrina there were some issues like that but that also became very big and that if i may well not know if i may say i think the difference between those many current u.s. virgin islands puerto rico is that we don't have anybody to look to to come to our aid we've got to do everything on subs so i think there's a whole different type of mindset i just wanted to say the feel that the even though we contribute the least in terms of. the little building along an aspect of it we tend to suffer the most and one may argue that even the u.s. has no teeth and that the woman. is not some. recognize that do you. less is no look at even up to the mandates of twenty one and so on so this is a real serious issue for those of us not have no real. hold on you know of look to point to all rescue but these are some of the issues i think that we need to look at and i think the fact that we always have the bend on all of that really means that we have much more. commitment to go forward and work with it so i think that is what makes a difference you know to grow and. why you want to have to get up and do those subs and that makes a big difference i think yes and i don't. i think it is but i could see that had it i was coming right after that had just a few. minutes and we've grown used to that i mean we have been independent accused of them food for food for nine years we have always had to fight all we got here tonight is something about how we can be the country was told to give us the truth but one of the wonderful thing about all caribbean people and i can say that even multiple the media. is that. we've gone through difficult times and we have ways of you know i'm just give you one story just a few days after we got heat by hurricane maria i accompanied a team from friends on the helicopter to ensure that we could provide food and water to one of the most vulnerable communities you know in the country the indigenous people of the continental people and when we got there and i'm talking about just a few days after we got here i met a gentleman and he said to me you don't want him boss of the asking holdings you said you know working with rob but you know we just came from repairing a house you had these. we just lost the ambassador for a moment that heavy what do you want to add to come back. here to have i just think it's like i just think it's it's interesting because first of all i don't feel like the u.s. is doing anything for puerto rico right now the u.s. has not impressed that any money in port on equal at this point and every dollar that they are trying to support their request i mean with some sort of. you know some sort of way in which puerto rico has to do something whether it be keeping more powers through the imperial school for a war that's really in the island or whether it be puerto rico having to privatized the schools or or doing a long you know list of on story missions that are going to hurt us more a more importantly i think with the burgeoning islands it's also a difference between and i might be wrong but we have five point eight puerto rico is in the u.s. there's about a million that are in learning so there's a lot of power that we can and might have in orlando which is giving us a little bit of an advantage when it comes to who to media coverage but when it comes to reality and when it comes to what they were really doing in puerto rico the congress right now is about to impose a tax in puerto rico that would cripple our own army and take down about two hundred thousand jobs so congress is is not doing anything for puerto rico and what it's doing for puerto rico would actually destroy the island more so i think at the end of the they we might be in different colo neal status but we are in many ways the same boat and we need to support each other you know who you know it's something that you raise the point about feeling like the u.s. federal government isn't doing enough or isn't doing anything we're hearing that from people online as well this is abigail and abigail and her family have taken medical supplies personal supplies solar chargers pampers clothing and other items to rural communities are taking things into their own hands here's what she told the stream. people in the rural areas have had no access to food. from fema because team is usually stationed in the plaza in the town and people in the rule areas of those mountain towns just can't get there they have no access to running water they have no access to the principal power. most of the generators that are now pounding the pumps that pump water to these towns i mean to these rule areas are supplied by foreign countries and private organizations such as ours but minister that's not the only example of people taking things into their own hands this is darlene she wants to think curtis gordon cooper hill elementary schools for supporting her island barbuda and a school supply and book drive you can see the pictures here boxes are packed wrapped and ready to go how are residents coping by helping each other. well that's a big plus for us even indicators of antigo where the but beautiful pollution have to come over to around the majority of anti guns took them into their homes so that was a grid grid i mean one of the produce moments for me. in addition to that off. maria domini we know have approximately three thousand domany residing in antigua and that is the good thing about the we as islands i love this all the cold. and of course there was some here i was here the middle of it the time really and friends and that's something that we're very proud about i mean even before the hurricane struck a couple days before a week before dominique dominique was one of the first countries to offer it to one of them then there was dramas and i mean there are tour offered it to them and that is we have flights coming in from all of the islands i mean we work really together and it shows the fact that i mean so so cooperation in the caribbean works very well together and is one of the produce moments for me being not just an empty gun but somebody from the caribbean so i think i get. very fortunate ambassador you know i agree i mean we the caribbean you know we always come together we work together and i have to thank you moments you don't buy beautiful your party no supports we got to be no support from the people but we're going to you would also i mean that part of the republican party don't we can go on to guns and you know very well because you are very very. knowledgeable of that but but we happy that we have seen so many you know people being able to get support from own neighbors and i think that's a great lesson i am not sure what is the case in the caribbean but i don't see especially because in southern and central caribbean we have. the the gun. not just the government but the people and what you saw in the case of want to do the school in is commonplace for us we received support from him through the caribbean and this didn't all come from the governments we've. got from government especially going so i but i'm just telling them let me just share this with you because we're in the last two minutes of this program live i'm sure people be watching this and also remembering the track of these three hurricanes that which are particular devastating i want to put them up on the screen because i'm actually going to go from that image here we go just going to repay them for you i'm sorry i have got it. so this is going back three months only get one track i'm sorry guess second track and then track number three ok bear with me and i come here to my laptop the caribbean is hope and open featured caribbean destinations when people think about the caribbean one of things i think about is vacations holiday destinations this is part of tourism is so critical if i'm asking you honestly to say is your island open for business today what would you say no. struggling to figure it out not put away cannot you are ok when it comes to like tourism it would be great to have or we're not ready are you ready. yeah i would say i would say yes we can bring people here technically and tourism is a very important part of our economy but the people here aren't they're not. you know they're not in the state they were before. and you we got that same question on twitter i asked did you know the caribbean is open posting to that same advertisement gyrus says i didn't know i'd love to go i thought nothing was left or contaminated water to drink but someone else has an answer this is jay he says have you ever seen the ocean this state of blue this is why he goes more than seventy percent of the caribbean was unaffected by the twenty seven thousand hurricane season the biggest way to help the region is by continuing to visit hopefully i'll be able to show the world that mt got is open for business well and there are and i love that he. says check if the cruise ships a stopping where you can they make sure the level of the port experience meets a certain standard so if that tree ships are going in that caribbean island is open for business thank you very much guys for sharing your updates on what's happened post the airline take how it can seize and we will see you on a string take have to play. under serious skies a bomb shattered monument to war's destructive powers yet amid the ruins the defiant still resist and somehow survived. people in power investigates how the suburb of damascus has refused to crumble under the might of assad's army. one of two at this time on al-jazeera. al-jazeera. swear every. facing the realities if a piece of machinery goes wrong is there a train of all of this to go should true which we can bring a legal system to bear getting to the heart of the matter i don't think we need of the wall that some of my producers just to hear their story on talk to al-jazeera at this time. you are making very pointed remarks where on line the main u.s. response to drug use and the drug trade over the last fifty years has been to criminalize or if you join us on sad no evil person just wakes up of in the morning and says i want to color the world in darkness and this is a dialogue and that could be what leading to some of the confusion a lie about people saying they don't actually know what's going on join the global conversation at this time on al-jazeera. hello i'm see tested in london with the top stories in algiers there are at least a hundred twenty.

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