Over 600 hundred protesters gathered in front of Puerto Rico Governor Wanda Vazquez’s mansion and the capitol building to demand her resignation after the discovery of a massive warehouse filled with unused emergency aid from Hurricane Maria in 2017.

They banged on pots and pans, chanting and waving Puerto Rican flags as one of the protesters yelled in a bullhorn, “Wanda, turn over the disaster supplies,” and “the fight goes on no matter what.”

A guillotine was set up in front of Vazquez’s home.

Protestors vowed to remain on the streets until Vazquez steps down. The scene is reminiscent of protests that led up to Governor Ricardo Rossello’s resignation in 2019.

A second warehouse in Guaynabo was also found stocked with supplies that had not been tapped, according to the newspaper El Nuevo Dia.

The demonstrations came the day after Gov. Vazquez fired Housing Secretary Fernando Gil and Department of Family Secretary Glorimar Andujar for their lack of information regarding the emergency aid collection and distribution centers. On Saturday, Vazquez fired emergency management director Carlos Acevedo.

“Wanda Vazquez needs to stop blaming others and show her face. We have to get rid of all the corrupt officials,” said government employee Mari Rivera.

In 2017, San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulin Cruz said President Trump was responsible for the deaths of thousands because of his neglect and slow response to the diseaster.

The New York Times reported of donated food found spoiled in a shipping container in the parking lot of a government facility in Augst 2018, while Puerto Ricans went weeks without food and water.

In September 2018, thousands of pallets of water bottles were found on a runway in Ceiba.

In July 2019, tens of thousands of unopened water bottles were found in a field expired. The water was sent by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) after Hurricane Maria.

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Bernie Sanders falsely accused the Trump administration of abandoning Puerto Rico even after news of the discovery of unused hurricane relief aid from 2017.

“The Trump administration abandoned Puerto Rico in the wake of Hurricane Maria. We will do no such thing. I stand with the people of Puerto Rico, and my administration will do everything we can to rebuild the island and prevent terrible tragedies like this,” tweeted Sanders.

President Trump released $8.2 billion in aid to Puerto Rico last week with conditions on how the money must be budgeted and spent.