Mismanagement leaves Colombia’s Hurricane Iota victims without drinking water for a week

Mindboggling mismanagement is leaving Colombia’s victims of Hurricane Iota without food and drinking water while diseases are spreading, health workers said Tuesday.

Iota allegedly destroyed 80% of the homes and almost all of on Providencia island’s infrastructure on Tuesday last week.

Far-right President Ivan Duque visited the island for a photo op the next day and appointed Social Prosperity chief Susana Correa to provide emergency aid and reconstruct the island within 100 days.

Since then, Correa’s utter mismanagement has caused an acute health crisis, according to desperate locals and health who said dead animals are rotting, drinking water is unavailable, and locals and soldiers are left without biosafety equipment.

Colombian public health association

Correa has been pretending she was doing her job perfectly.

“We made sure yesterday that all the inhabitants of Providencia and Santa Catalina are provided with food and water. We have 100% coverage,” Correa claimed on Monday.

On Wednesday, the officials said the 5,000 locals received 12,000 liters of water over the past week. This is 0.3 liters of water per person per day.

This has left the locals unable to either drink or cook as their drinking water tanks were destroyed by the hurricane.

Actor Gaston Velandia

The crisis coordinator subsequently boasted water pumps draining water from underground wells, but the health association said this water was not just unfit for consumption, but “full of flies, mice, cockroaches, garbage and decomposed waste.”

Colombian public health association

The government has been sending food supplies like beans, for example, but these supplies are useless as the hurricane victims have no water or gas.

The lack of water additionally appears to cause a surge in coronavirus infections as “of the 60 Covid-19 tests performed on the island of Providence, 100% were positive.”

Additionally, “people are getting wet because their homes are uninhabited, some have pneumonia,” as the hurricane ripped the roof of virtually all buildings and there is only one tent for every 10 inhabitants.

Duque ignored the health crisis and stressed the “very positive news” that telecommunications had been restored on the island, so that locals can call their family about the government’s neglect.

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