Dumb, very dumb, move by Royal Caribbean

I watched a Haiti segment tonight on CBS’ 60 Minutes… it was riveting, tragic, gut wrenching, sickening, appalling and more.  There were interviews with American surgeons using rum and vodka as alcohol replacements, hack saws as instruments of amputations… and compassion… so much compassion.

Also shown were bulldozers being used in one makeshift outdoor morgue to bury the hundreds of victims dumped there by family, friends and officials charged with doing something with the dead.

It reminded me of the grainy holocaust scenes filmed in Germany so many years ago except it’s now and it’s Haiti.  The missus and I watched in silence.  We should all be watching.

Juxtapose those described scenes with what follows and tell me that the decision-makers involved are doing the right thing:

Sixty miles from Haiti’s devastated earthquake zone, luxury liners dock at private beaches where passengers enjoy jet ski rides, parasailing and rum cocktails delivered to their hammocks.

The 4,370-berth Independence of the Seas, owned by Royal Caribbean International, disembarked at the heavily guarded resort of Labadee on the north coast on Friday; a second cruise ship, the 3,100-passenger Navigator of the Seas is due to dock.

The Florida cruise company leases a picturesque wooded peninsula and its five pristine beaches from the government for passengers to “cut loose” with watersports, barbecues, and shopping for trinkets at a craft market before returning on board before dusk. Safety is guaranteed by armed guards at the gate.

The decision to go ahead with the visit has divided passengers. The ships carry some food aid, and the cruise line has pledged to donate all proceeds from the visit to help stricken Haitians. But many passengers will stay aboard when they dock; one said he was “sickened”.

“I just can’t see myself sunning on the beach, playing in the water, eating a barbecue, and enjoying a cocktail while [in Port-au-Prince] there are tens of thousands of dead people being piled up on the streets, with the survivors stunned and looking for food and water,” one passenger wrote on the Cruise Critic internet forum.

“It was hard enough to sit and eat a picnic lunch at Labadee before the quake, knowing how many Haitians were starving,” said another. “I can’t imagine having to choke down a burger there now.”

Some booked on ships scheduled to stop at Labadee are afraid that desperate people might breach the resort’s 12ft high fences to get food and drink, but others seemed determined to enjoy their holiday.”I’ll be there on Tuesday and I plan on enjoying my zip line excursion as well as the time on the beach,” said one.

The company said the question of whether to “deliver a vacation experience so close to the epicentre of an earthquake” had been subject to considerable internal debate before it decided to include Haiti in its itineraries for the coming weeks.

“In the end, Labadee is critical to Haiti’s recovery; hundreds of people rely on Labadee for their livelihood,” said John Weis, vice-president. “In our conversations with the UN special envoy of the government of Haiti, Leslie Voltaire, he notes that Haiti will benefit from the revenues that are generated from each call …

“We also have tremendous opportunities to use our ships as transport vessels for relief supplies and personnel to Haiti. Simply put, we cannot abandon Haiti now that they need us most.”

I think there’s a need… and I think cruise ships could be used to fulfill that need… but to vacation less than one hundred miles from where perhaps 200,000 are dead and where millions are suffering… I can’t fathom it…

Call me a softee, a liberal even… but there’s something terribly wrong about it.

Crossposted(*).

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