[R-G] When Ike Hit Haiti
Anthony Fenton
fentona at shaw.ca
Sat Oct 18 14:31:33 MDT 2008
Weekend Edition
October 17 / 20, 2008
"The Damage is Immense"
When Ike Hit Haiti
By BEN TERRALL
http://counterpunch.com/terrall10172008.html
As the death toll from Hurricane Ike was over 70 in the U.S., but the
storm’s aftermath in Haiti was much worse. Four tropical storms in a
month killed between 500 and 1,000 Haitians, and left hundreds of
thousands homeless. According to the United Nations Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), up to 800,000 people -
almost 10 percent of Haiti’s population - are in dire need of
humanitarian assistance.
President Rene Préval told The Miami Herald, “This is Katrina in the
entire country, but without the means that Louisiana had.”
I spoke to Matt Marek, head of programs for the American Red Cross in
Haiti, who told me “the damage is immense.” Marek has been traveling
in isolated communities to facilitate aid deliveries. He described a
number of areas that had bridges washed out, creating logistical
challenges for aid delivery. He stressed that Haiti’s government
being so resource-strapped makes it much harder to get food and clean
water to people in need, and noted that the damage to Haiti’s already
limited ability to grow its own food will create enormous long-term
challenges.
The San Francisco Bay Area-based Haiti Emergency Relief Fund sent out
an appeal in mid-September which noted, “For the last two years, we
have heard from the international mainstream press that Haiti was
moving slowly towards democratic government, security and economic
progress. Supposedly, the United Nations occupation and the 2006
election of President Rene Preval had allowed Haitians to move on, to
somehow forget that its democratically elected president, Jean-
Bertrand Aristide, had been overthrown in a violent coup in which
thousands had been killed, displaced, imprisoned and exiled.”
The Relief Fund appeal continued, “The United Nations occupation
forces have a budget of over $535 million this year, and the Preval
government has received international aid denied to the former
government of President Aristide. Even with these resources, the
authorities have not come close to reinstating the disaster relief
programs that had been in place under Aristide.”
Indeed, when Hurricane Jeanne devastated the northern city of Gonaives
in September 2004, Brian Concannon of the Institute for Justice and
Democracy in Haiti pointed out that in 2003, “twenty-three local civil
protection committees were formed, and over 5,000 people were trained
in disaster awareness. The Civil Protection Office had plans to warn
communities of approaching storms and to provide emergency assistance.”
Unfortunately, that office, its network and committees were attacked
and its officials killed, arrested or driven into hiding during the
2004 US-backed coup against the democratically-elected Aristide
government.
When I was in Haiti in late August of this year, numerous people told
me that the price of rice had doubled since the April food riots. One
activist I spoke to bitterly said it had gotten to the point where
food was a “luxury.” Many people expressed fear that there would
soon be more riots.
UN officials and blue helmets in Haiti live in a higher economic
strata than the vast majority of Haitians. Their presence has had an
inflationary impact in many sectors, including housing.
In his inaugural speech in 2006, Préval called on the UN mission to
switch its focus from violent military operations to building up the
country’s infrastructure: "We will ask it to help us with more
tractors, bulldozers, loaders, trucks to build roads, to make canals
to water our lands. These are the materials that are necessary today
to stabilize the country. There is no longer any need for tanks."
But in a Port-au-Prince interview this August, UN spokesperson Sophie
Boutaud de la Combe told me that MINUSTAH’s mandate is for
“stabilization” and does not include development work. She stressed
that the UN’s emphasis on security was intended to help create a
climate in which renewed investment would create new jobs.
The same week, I interviewed grassroots Lavalas activist Rene Civil,
who criticized the UN for “protecting the interests of the minority,
rather than the majority” of Hait i’s population. Civil stressed “it
has to be clear that Lavalas is not against the UN, just against UN
occupation in Haiti.” Civil told me “the UN could have a different
policy” focusing on development, “where Haiti benefits agriculturally.”
OCHA reports that in the wake of the past month’s storms in Haiti,
almost all agricultural land in the country has been flooded. The
entire harvest for the current agricultural season has been severely
damaged or destroyed.
The effectiveness of relief efforts so far was called into question by
a strongly worded October 14 statement from Doctors Without Borders.
The organization, which usually eschews such strong public
proclamations, stated:
“International food aid reaching the community is clearly insufficient
in quantity, unsuitable for the nutritional needs of young children,
and it is being distributed in a way that excludes single women with
children. There is still no clear strategy to identify the needs, nor
implement a proper nutritional response.
“Despite the significant presence of international organizations –
with plenty of experts and publications to show for it – the people of
Gonaïves have yet to see much benefit. Hurricane season ends in late
November. If another one were to strike the region with more heavy
rains, inhabitants here would once again pay a heavy price.
“MSF urges international organizations and the Haitian government to
immediately re-examine their emergency aid response, and to prioritize
housing and nutritional support for the youngest of the flood victims.”
Ben Terrall is a freelance writer living in San Francisco. He can be
reached at: bterrall at gmail.com
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