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November 5, 2024
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Biden orders more troops to help North Carolina recovery efforts

US President Joe Biden said yesterday that he has ordered another 500 active-duty troops to move into western North Carolina and assist with the response and recovery efforts after the deadly and devastating Hurricane Helene.“With a total of 1,500 troops now supplementing a robust on-the-ground effort – including more than 6,100 National Guardsmen and more than 7,000 federal personnel – my administration is sparing no resource to support families as they begin their road to rebuilding,” Biden said in a statement.He also said that he is being briefed on tropical storm Milton as it strengthened across the Gulf of Mexico.The potentially devastating storm barrelled toward the Florida coast yesterday, as the head of the US disaster relief agency lashed out at a “dangerous” misinformation war being waged over the aftermath of Hurricane Helene.The National Hurricane Centre (NHC) said Milton intensified into a Category 1 hurricane yesterday with maximum sustained winds of 80mph (130kph).Milton was churning in the Gulf of Mexico, west-southwest of Tampa, with nothing but 800 miles of warm ocean between it and the Florida coast – an area still reeling from Helene’s catastrophic winds and storm surge.It could hit by midweek as a major storm, the NHC said.Deanne Criswell, the head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), said that the federal authorities were “absolutely ready” for Milton.“We will move resources in there to support their needs,” she told ABC’s This Week.Florida Governor Ron DeSantis upped the number of counties under a state of emergency to 51 ahead of the storm.Helene roared into the Florida coastline as a Category 4 storm on September 26 and carved a path of destruction inland to the Appalachian mountains, dumping torrential rainfall and flash flooding on remote towns in states such as North Carolina.The storm has killed more than 220 people – making it the deadliest natural disaster to hit the United States since 2005’s Hurricane Katrina – with the toll still rising.Relief workers are racing to find survivors and to get power and drinking water to mountainous communities cut off by the devastation.However, that effort has been hit by a wave of false claims and conspiracy theories.Among the litany of disinformation is the lie pushed by Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump that funding for relief has been misappropriated by his rival for the White House, Democrat Kamala Harris, and redirected toward migrants.“It’s frankly ridiculous and just plain false … it’s really a shame that we’re putting politics ahead of helping people,” Criswell told ABC.It is a “truly dangerous narrative that is creating this fear of trying to reach out and help us or to register for help”, she said.ABC reported that law enforcement is monitoring threats made toward FEMA officials and other recovery agencies that were prompted by the disinformation.In addition to Trump’s false claim, the Washington Post reported yesterday on a series of other lies swirling around Helene that it said were “adding to the chaos and confusion in many storm-battered communities”.They include a false claim that a dam was about to burst, which the Post said prompted hundreds of people to unnecessarily evacuate, and a “troubling” lie that officials planned to bulldoze bodies under the rubble in one North Carolina town.One user suggested “a militia go against FEMA” in a post on X, formerly Twitter, which has received more than half a million views.Asked about that post, Criswell said it “has a tremendous impact on the comfort level of our own employees to be able to go out there” and called it “demoralising”.“It’s just, you know, a shame that people are sitting home on their comfortable couches (while) we have thousands of people here on the ground that have left their own families to be able to help those in need,” she said.The FEMA has begun debunking the rumours online, as have authorities in the hard-hit state of North Carolina.Local officials have urged residents to ignore the online falsehoods.“I would encourage the good residents of western North Carolina to turn that garbage off,” one local sheriff said.Much of the focus was on X.Before the platform was purchased by Elon Musk, when it was still known as Twitter, it was a go-to place for disaster co-ordination and information sharing.However, the billionaire has allowed right-wing disinformation and conspiracy theories to flood the platform.“When Musk bought Twitter, there were many of us in the disaster space who warned that there would likely be changes that would make the platform less useful during disasters,” Sam Montano, a disaster expert, told the Post. “I think that we’re seeing that manifest now.”

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