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Dominicana_1965
7th September 2007, 18:02
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - A huge U.S. Navy hospital ship brought state-of-the-art medical care to the Western Hemisphere's poorest country this week during a regional goodwill mission aimed at countering leftist Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez's influence.

The USNS Comfort, a 900-foot-long floating hospital built for wounded American soldiers, carries more than 600 medical volunteers who have provided free vaccinations, eye exams, dental treatment and surgical procedures to more than 85,000 patients in a dozen countries during their tour of Latin America and the Caribbean.

The volunteers also train local doctors, build clinics and treat sick animals, trying to generate goodwill in a region the Bush administration has been accused of slighting as it focuses on U.S.-led wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and terror concerns at home.

"We are here to try and make a difference, not just in the short term but in the long term as well. It's a win-win for all involved," Capt. Bob Kapcio, the Comfort's commanding officer, said during the ship's arrival ceremony in Haiti.

Some critics question the long-term impact of the Comfort's four-month voyage. The American ship only stays in port for a few days in each country and at the moment has no firm plans to return to the region.

"It is a clever move and likely to win the U.S. some goodwill in the short term. But the big question of all these missions is sustainability," Dan Erikson, a Caribbean expert with the Washington-based Inter-American Dialogue.

In Haiti, the ship is an apparition off a coastline dotted with crumbling shanties and smoldering trash piles. Fishermen paddling homemade boats stare up in awe at the white ship emblazoned with red crosses.

At Port-au-Prince's seaport, dozens of patients strapped on life vests and boarded ferries to reach the Comfort, a converted oil supertanker whose gleaming surgical center, dental ward and pediatrics unit provide a level of medical care beyond most Haitians' wildest dreams.

Haiti is so poor that public hospitals are strewn with patients on floors for lack of beds. Private hospitals turn away even gunshot victims who cannot afford to pay.

"If I went to a hospital in Haiti, this would have cost a lot of money so this really is a miracle for me," said Gertrude Fortune, 49, laying on a hospital bed before undergoing hernia surgery.

The Comfort's mission has been earning rave reviews, from impoverished villagers to heads of state.

In July, the Comfort stopped at El Salvador. About 1,000 farmers were treated and some 15 operations were performed aboard ship. "It's helping the people a lot," Salvadoran President Tony Saca said.

When President Bush announced the Comfort's mission in March he promised more U.S. help for health and education in a region oil-rich Venezuela has been showering with aid. Chavez's government has pledged more than $8.8 billion to the region this year, although it isn't known how much has actually been delivered.

By comparison, $3 billion in American grants and loans reached the region in 2005, according to the most recent figures available.

As Washington raises the profile of its assistance to the region, the U.S. military is helping victims of natural disasters. On Wednesday, it diverted the U.S. Navy amphibious ship USS Wasp from military exercises off Panama to help Nicaragua recover from Hurricane Felix. Venezuela also sent aid to Nicaragua, and 57 Cuban doctors and nurses already established on the Miskito coast on medical missions were helping as well.

U.S. military medics also rushed to Peru after last month's 8.0-magnitude earthquake devastated towns and villages.

The Comfort has visited nine countries so far _ Guatemala, Belize, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Panama, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and now Haiti. It sets sail next for Trinidad, Suriname and Guyana before wrapping up its tour.

Haiti, in particular, has been the focus of U.S. aid.

Washington is Haiti's single largest donor, giving more than $850 million between 1995 and 2003, according to the State Department's Web site. The U.S. has donated more than $390 million to help Haiti rebuild since a 2004 uprising ousted then President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.

But Chavez also has become a huge donor for Haiti, promising $221 million in aid projects so far this year.

Jean Francois Wisline said she could care less about the U.S.-Venezuelan rivalry. She was simply grateful to be getting surgery to remove a painful cyst in her chest.

"I'm just happy to finally get it taken care of because I've really been suffering," Wisline said. "I'll take any help I can get."

As many as 1,000 Haitians lined up beneath a blazing sun outside Port-au-Prince's University of Peace Hospital, hoping to see a team of U.S. doctors and dentists who came ashore from the Comfort. Mindful this may be their only chance for free medical care, there was jostling as people struggled to keep their places in line.

"Seeing a doctor isn't easy in Haiti so I really I hope I get in," said Nobious Robert, a 24-year-old street peddler who arrived at dawn to have a groin pain looked at.

Doctor diplomacy has long been practiced in Latin America, most notably by Cuba's communist government, which each year sends thousands of doctors to provide free care in poor countries in the region. Venezuela funds a growing number of these missions. Many students from the region also study for free at Cuba's School of Latin American Medicine.

Cuban leader Fidel Castro himself criticized the Comfort's mission, saying "You can't carry out medical programs in episodes."

But U.S. officials say the Comfort's mission is designed for maximum effectiveness, with most medical procedures performed on patients requiring little or no follow up. The also say that by training medical staff and building clinics and schools, these countries will be better able to help themselves in the future.

http://www.comcast.net/news/international/.../07/757410.html (http://www.comcast.net/news/international/latinamerica/index.jsp?cat=LATIN&fn=/2007/09/07/757410.html)

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Thoughts ?

The Living Red
7th September 2007, 18:45
A quick skirting of the Latin American coastline by US warship-turned-hospital does not hope to compare with the wealth of internationalist-spirited aid that Cuba and Venezuela have provided, not only in Lat Am but further afield such as in Pakistan.
Cuban doctors (the number of whom at one point reached 2,500) stayed in Pakistan for seven months after the earthquake there in 2005. Compare that with the few days that this SS Comfort spends in each port it slithers into.

This is propaganda, plain'n'simple.
Here's more on what Castro had to say on it:

HAVANA (Reuters) - Cuban President Fidel Castro on Sunday scoffed at Bush administration efforts to ease social problems in Latin America, boasting his poor country could run circles around the United States in health and education aid.

"Bush will discover that the empire's political and economic system can't compete in the area of vital services such as education and health with Cuba, assaulted and blockaded for almost 50 years," Castro wrote in an editorial published by the official newspaper Rebel Youth.

"Everyone knows the U.S. specialty in the area of education is to steal brains," Castro charged, citing an International Labor Organization report that 47 percent of foreign-born students that complete a Ph.D. in the United States stay on there.

A Cuban literacy program is being used by millions throughout Latin America and the Caribbean, Castro said.

The 80-year-old Cuban leader has taken to writing opinion pieces as he recovers from a series of intestinal surgeries over the last year.

Castro's brother and defense minister, Raul Castro, 76, has been temporarily running the government.

The Bush administration hosted 150 Latin American and 90 U.S. organizations this week to discuss U.S. social work in Latin America and promote corporate efforts in the region.

The White House Conference on the Americas was attended by Bush, his wife, Laura, and five Cabinet members as part of an effort to counter Venezuela's and Cuba's growing use of education and health programs to win hearts and minds in South America.

Communist Castro and socialist Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez are challenging U.S. influence with their own integration plan that combines Venezuela's oil wealth and Cuba's human capital to offer preferential oil deals and massive social programs to other countries.

Castro on Sunday ridiculed the current four-month tour of the region by the U.S. hospital ship Comfort.

"You can't carry out medical programs by episodes," he said, comparing the ship's coming weeklong stop in Haiti with the hundreds of Cuban doctors working for nearly a decade there alongside Haitians trained in Cuba.

Bush highlighted a Panama-based center that has upgraded the skills of 100 Central American doctors and plans to establish a nursing school, among other projects, during his opening speech at the Conference of the Americas.

Castro countered on Sunday with the Cuban-run eye clinics in the region that have operated on 700,000 of the region's poor.

"Our country has dozens of thousands of Latin American and Caribbean students studying medicine in an absolutely free program," Castro said.

"We are cooperating with Venezuela to train more than 20,000 youth there as doctors," he added.

Mkultra
8th September 2007, 01:25
yet they cant even provide this aid to Americas OWN poor--what a farce

Red October
8th September 2007, 01:46
It's obvious this is a sham for good publicity. America consistently ranks poorly in the percentage of it's wealth given in aid to starving, diseased, and oppressed people around the world. I'm glad people in Haiti are getting medical aid, but this little charade is like giving a bandaid to a gunshot victim.

Mkultra
8th September 2007, 01:48
Originally posted by Red [email protected] 08, 2007 12:46 am
It's obvious this is a sham for good publicity. America consistently ranks poorly in the percentage of it's wealth given in aid to starving, diseased, and oppressed people around the world. I'm glad people in Haiti are getting medical aid, but this little charade is like giving a bandaid to a gunshot victim.
around the world? try even in America itself where people are literally DYING with no health care cause theyre not millionaires--its really perverse

The Living Red
8th September 2007, 17:04
Exactly. Look at Hurricane Katrina for example (when Cuban aid was refused), plus the fact that the States are now locked in economic meltdown resulting in thousands of poor losing their homes.

Mkultra
8th September 2007, 21:45
Originally posted by The Living [email protected] 08, 2007 04:04 pm
Exactly. Look at Hurricane Katrina for example (when Cuban aid was refused), plus the fact that the States are now locked in economic meltdown resulting in thousands of poor losing their homes.
its always been a GOP wet dream to make the govt be a private playground that exists for the wealthiest 1% alone to loot for their own narrow anti human interests

Republican Values is the essence of parasitism personified