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Loss of life by disasters is avoidable -
Cuba a U.N. model
Posted on Sept. 5, 2005 The massive
loss of life at August/September 2005 in Louisiana and Mississippi was
avoidable, if those making decisions were interested in funding
emergency measures rather than spending money on war and occupation.
Cuba lies directly in the path of many hurricanes, and yet the loss of
life is usually minimal, because the government has systems in place to
aid orderly evacuations, provide emergency shelter, and look after the
elderly, the handicapped, and the poor.
In 2001, when Hurricane Michelle, a level-4
storm, hit with sustained 125-mile-per-hour winds and widespread floods,
more than 700,000 people were evacuated. Only five Cubans lost their
lives in the storm. In September
2004, Cuba endured Ivan, the fifth-largest hurricane ever to hit the
Caribbean, with sustained winds of 124 miles per hour. Cuba evacuated
almost 2 million people--more than 15 percent of the total population.
One hundred thousand people were evacuated within the first three hours.
An incredible 78 percent of those evacuated were welcomed into other
people's homes. Children at boarding schools were moved. Animals and
birds were moved. No one was killed. The UN declared this to be a model
of disaster preparation. Cuba, a country blockaded and isolated by the U.S. for 45 years has been
able to evacuate millions of people in an orderly fashion without loss
of life. Natural disasters do not have to be catastrophes.
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