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After Irma, fear and looting grip tense St Martin
By Romain FONSEGRIVES
Marigot (AFP) Sept 11, 2017


400 hurricane survivors arrive in France, Netherlands
Paris (AFP) Sept 11, 2017 - About 400 exhausted and traumatised survivors of Hurricane Irma, which pummelled Caribbean islands last week, arrived in France and the Netherlands on Monday aboard military planes.

A plane with 278 aboard landed in Paris, while another 100 people flew into Eindhoven in the southern Netherlands from the Guadeloupe capital Pointe-a-Pitre.

Both the French and Dutch governments have come under criticism over delays in their responses to the crisis and in particular over how they handled outbreaks of looting on St Barthelemy and St Martin, an island with both French and Dutch sectors.

"They gave us phone numbers but they didn't work. Only social media and solidarity worked," said a mother picking up her daughter at Paris's Charles de Gaulle airport.

"People were left to their own devices. They had to set up militias and take turns defending themselves (against looters)," she said. "All the gangs came to the French side... with guns and machetes. It's unbelievably chaotic."

Arriving in Eindhoven, 30-year-old Clara James said the Dutch side of St Martin "literally looks like a war zone."

"And at sunset, at nightfall, the looting starts. Because they have nothing left, their houses have been destroyed... I can't describe it," said James, a Rotterdam resident who was returning from St Martin, where she visiting her ailing father when the hurricane struck.

The Dutch government has particularly been faulted for delays in organising rescue flights to bring home tourists left stranded when the storm hit the Caribbean on Wednesday.

"They reacted far too late," said Kitty Algra, who was among the first group of 55 Dutch tourists evacuated on a military flight from St Martin to the nearby island of Curacao to await a flight home.

Algra told the Dutch newspaper AD of a chaotic situation after Irma devastated the island, destroying about 60 percent of homes.

"Immediately after the storm, people were walking around with baseball bats," she said. "That was more disappointing than the hurricane."

- 'Lost everything' -

In France, opposition firebrand Jean-Luc Melenchon has demanded a parliamentary inquiry into whether enough security forces have been sent to restore order on St Martin after looting broke out after the storm.

Prime Minister Edouard Philippe angrily accused politicians of trying to capitalise on the hurricane, calling for "solidarity with our citizens, many of whom have lost everything".

Britain, too, has faced criticism that it has been slow to help its citizens caught up in the disaster -- including in the British Virgin Islands, where five people were killed.

But Britain's Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson called the criticism "completely unjustified".

Britain has pledged �32 million (35 million euros, $42 million) in aid and sent hundreds of troops, supplies and rescue equipment on several flights to the British territories in the Caribbean since Friday.

"For pity's sake, do something," Estelle Kalton begs the police. "They're looting the shops."

A crime wave on the Franco-Dutch Caribbean holiday island of St Martin, five days after hurricane Irma ripped through, has everyone on edge.

It is only by making a scene on the steps of a makeshift security centre set up in Marigot, the main town on the French side of the island, that Kalton is able to confront officials.

She gets an angry response to her charges of looting. "We know," a police officer replies.

Minutes earlier, France's Minister for Overseas Territories Annick Girardin had walked down the same steps after assuring reporters that "there is now security" on the island.

But officials and people in the streets seem to have different definitions of "security" and criticism of the state's response to the disaster is mounting on the island and in Paris.

"Police saw people trying to loot our store," says Kalton's 57-year-old husband Philippe.

"Sometimes they're just 50 metres away, but they don't do anything.

"They told me that people's security is the priority and that the rest is only material, that it's not important."

The shopkeeper moved to St Martin seven years ago. Before Irma, he and his wife enjoyed a sun-soaked life in a villa by the turquoise waters of Nettle Bay.

What remains of their house, metres from the beach, is visible from the steps of the security centre. Like the others, it is a wreck.

Now, the two clothing shops the couple ran on Liberty Street are "all we have left".

- 'We'll shoot you' -

Exhausted and angry, the Kaltons are watching over their shops as much as they can, and have asked a neighbour to do the same.

During the most recent break-in attempt, the neighbour scared away the looters with a machete.

"They said to him, 'If you stay here we'll come back, we'll shoot you and take what we want," Philippe Kalton says, grim-faced.

Regional police chief Jean-Marc Descoux said some 500-600 local delinquents were likely responsible for most of the looting, taking advantage of the devastation for personal profit.

"But it is also people who are desperate, who are panicking and who have nothing left but misery," he told the broadcaster France Info.

Paris is battling accusations that it was underprepared for the devastation in its Caribbean territories, with opposition leftwinger Jean-Luc Melenchon demanding a parliamentary inquiry into whether enough security forces were sent.

Fourteen people have been killed on the island, 10 on the French side and four on the Dutch, and many homes destroyed.

Along with some 85 tonnes of food, one million litres of water and 2,200 kilos of medicine, some 1,500 rescue workers, troops and security forces are on the ground on St Martin, a number set to rise shortly to 2,000.

But for many residents, it is not enough.

On the Dutch side of the island, too, there are complaints of looting and criticism of the official response.

"They reacted far too late. The French were much quicker on St Martin to evacuate people," Kitty Algra, one of the first group of 55 Dutch tourists evacuated on a military flight to Curacao, told the Dutch newspaper AD.

"Immediately after the storm, people were walking around with baseball bats. That was more disappointing than the hurricane," she added.

- 'Lootings every 10 minutes' -

The storefronts in the centre of Marigot are testament to the paranoid atmosphere gripping the island.

Every shop has its metal shutters drawn. Some show signs of being forced open with crowbars.

On one corner, a clothing shop stands open to the elements, its windows smashed in. The mannequins have been stripped of their clothes; the coathangers are bare.

In the Bellevue commercial district to the south, two soldiers patrol between the warehouses.

"I'm stopping a looter every 10 minutes," one of them says.

Inside what was once a food storeroom lies an enormous pile of junk. A half-eaten pot of chocolate spread sits on an empty stretch of looted shelves.

"The owner was planning to give everything away to residents," the soldier says bitterly.

"I'm from the West Indes and the behaviour of people on this island makes me sick. Until they calm down it'll be difficult to distribute supplies."

Neighbouring shops, selling toys and electronic goods, have been similarly ransacked.

"What's the point in making off with a giant teddy bear when you're struggling to find enough to eat?" rails Elena Baudry, a local resident.

And she fears the chaos won't end here.

"Now that the shops are empty, they're going to rob the houses," she says.

SHAKE AND BLOW
Irma weakens but continues to batter Florida
Miami (AFP) Sept 11, 2017
Hurricane Irma, which has toppled cranes, swallowed streets and left millions without power, weakened to a Category 1 storm Monday but remained dangerous as it continued its furious climb up Florida's southwest coast. Warnings of hazardous storm surges remained in effect through vast swaths of peninsular Florida, where more than six million people had been ordered to flee Irma's path - one ... read more

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