NASSAU, Bahamas — In a tweet on his Facebook page, Prime Minister the Most Hon. Dr. Hubert Minnis thank Chef Jose Andres “and his team” for the remarkable assistance they provided to The Bahamas in the aftermath of the devastation caused to Abaco and Grand Bahama by category 5 Hurricane Dorian earlier this month.
In his tweet, the Prime Minister noted: “While I was in New York for UNGA I had the chance to meet up with Chef Jose Andres and his team from WCKitchen. I cannot thank you enough for helping The Bahamas in our time of need by providing tens of thousands of meals in the aftermath of Hurricane Dorian. We appreciate you!”
According to José Andres’ World Central Kitchen website, “Earlier this month, Hurricane Dorian slammed into The Bahamas as the largest hurricane in recorded history to hit the Caribbean island chain. In anticipation of the storm, José and World Central Kitchen’s Chef Relief Team arrived in Nassau three days before landfall to prepare for a massive relief effort.
“As soon as the storm passed – after a storm surge of up to 20 feet on Grand Bahama and Abaco – the team sprang into action. Despite the utter devastation of the northern islands, the team quickly organized logistics to get food to as many people in need as possible, making sandwiches and cooking hot meals in a kitchen on Nassau and using helicopters, seaplanes, and boats to distribute.
“The situation in the Bahamas remains challenging. Some communities still don’t have communications, water, or power. While many residents have left Abaco and Grand Bahama – and are being served meals at evacuee shelters throughout Nassau – many others still remain, so the team has continued to cook and deliver meals to community centers, clinics, churches, and into local neighborhoods that have been isolated by the storm.”
Prime Minister Minnis was in New York to deliver The Bahamas’ National Statement at the 74th United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) on Friday, September 27.
In his remarks, Dr. Minnis urged the nations of the world to treat the global climate emergency as the greatest challenge facing humanity.
According to a Bahamas Information Services (BIS) release, the Prime Minister’s “plea joins the cries and voices of many other world leaders and global citizens and comes almost one month after the Category 5 Hurricane Dorian devastated parts of Abaco and Grand Bahama.”
Prime Minister Minnis said that if climate change is not treated with the greatest urgency it will continue to ravage small island states such as The Bahamas and will also have a devastating impact on more developed states.
“The Bahamas fully supports the [UN] Secretary General’s comprehensive strategy to address a global emergency which will eventually devastate the entire planet,” said Prime Minister Minnis.
Secretary General Antonio Guterres’ strategy also includes a plea to international financial institutions to provide concessionary financing to countries severely impacted by the external shocks occasioned by climate change.
Prime Minister Minnis would like The Bahamas to be included in the UN Development Program that is already working with three Caribbean countries – St. Lucia, Dominica, and Antigua and Barbuda – on various measures.
For many years, The Bahamas and countries with similar characteristics have urged an alternative to per capita Gross National Income as the sole indicator of a country’s level of development and eligibility for concessionary financing.
“When we call for consideration of a country’s unique local circumstances when determining financial worthiness, this is also a condition and requirement for our resilience,” said Prime Minister Minnis. “The Bahamas is a testament to the ability of SIDS to manage debt despite such external setbacks.”
Prime Minister Minnis said that in the context of the global climate emergency, he was not only speaking on behalf of the Bahamian people but it was also his responsibility as a citizen of a vulnerable state to speak on behalf of the community of Small Island Developing States; the peoples of the Caribbean and CARICOM; and on behalf of coastal communities and others around the world who are especially vulnerable from rising sea levels and from increasingly powerful storms.
“The small island countries in the Caribbean, in the Atlantic, in the Pacific, and in the Indian Ocean and around the world, are on the frontlines of being swallowed into an abyss, created initially by human activity and increasingly by inaction,” said the Prime Minister. “Our vulnerabilities as states on the frontline are profound.”
The Prime Minister took the opportunity to invite potential travellers throughout the world to visit one or more of the 14 other major islands in The Bahamas not affected by Hurricane Dorian, including Nassau.
“The revenue from tourists visiting The Bahamas will play a vital role in reconstructing and rebuilding the affected areas,” said Prime Minister Minnis.
The surpassing beauty of The Bahamas and the country’s many low-lying islands and over 2,400 cays are under grave threat, said the Prime Minister.
“It is a threat which we did not cause,” said Prime Minister Minnis. “It is a threat which we cannot survive on our own.”