Macron swears amid furious exchange with cyclone-hit Mayotte islanders
French president makes remark when confronted by residents still without water after huge storm last week
Emmanuel Macron swore during a furious exchange with residents of the cyclone-hit islands of Mayotte on Thursday night, telling a jeering crowd in the French territory “if this wasn’t France, you’d be in a bath of shit 10,000 times worse”.
Cyclone Chido swept through Mayotte,
which lies between Madagascar and Mozambique, on 14 December,
destroying vital infrastructure and flattening many of the tin-roofed
shacks that make up its large slums. Almost a week after its worst storm
in 90 years, France’s poorest territory still has shortages of water.
Throughout Thursday, the French president was confronted by angry Mahorais
demanding to know why aid had not yet reached them. At one point he
told a crowd: “You are happy to be in France. If this wasn’t France,
you’d be in a bath of shit 10,000 times worse. There is no other place
in the Indian Ocean where people are helped as much, that’s a fact.”
On Thursday night, Macron said he was extending his visit to a second day “as a mark of respect, of consideration”.
“I
decided to sleep here because I considered that, given what the
population is going through, [leaving the same day could have] installed
the idea that we come, we look, we leave,” he said.
The
heckling continued on Friday. “Seven days and you’re not able to give
water to the population,” one man shouted at Macron as he toured the
small community of Tsingoni, on the west coast of Mayotte’s main island,
Grande-Terre.
“I understand your impatience. You can count on me,” Macron responded, saying that water would be distributed at city halls.
The official death toll, at 31, has remained lower than expected, after
officials said they feared thousands could have been killed. Immediate
burials, in keeping with Islamic tradition, and the large numbers of
undocumented migrants from the nearby Comoros who avoid authorities for
fear of being deported, may mean the true number of fatalities is never
known.
The cyclone also killed 73 people in northern
Mozambique and 13 in Malawi, according to authorities in the south-east
African countries.
Mayotte officially has a
population of 320,000, but authorities have said there could be
100,000-200,000 more, most from the Comoros and living in the islands’
slums. Mayotte became a part of France in 1841 and voted to stay French in 1974, when the Comoros islands chose independence.
Earlier in the week, the interior minister, Bruno
Retailleau, a rightwinger who is vocally anti-immigrant, said Mayotte
could not be rebuilt without addressing migration.
In
Kaweni, a slum on the edge of the island’s capital, Mamoudzou, Ali
Djimoi said eight people who had lived close to him were killed by the
cyclone, two of them buried quickly near a mosque.
Mayotte
had been “completely abandoned” by the French state, he said. “The
water running out the pipes – even if it’s working you can’t drink it,
it comes out dirty.”
If you would like to become a W³P Lives contributor, please fill out the contact form below. You may submit any email address; however, you will need a gmail to login to blogger.com and access the back end of the blog where posts are created.
If you do not want to submit your actual email, please create a gmail specifically for this purpose and submit it to us via the form below. It will skip a step, since a gmail will be required to login anyways.
After filling out the form keep any eye out for your email invitation in your inbox. Accept the invitation, login to blogger.com, and start making discussions.
Post a Comment