Despite
the fact that over a million people remained homeless in Haiti one
month after the earthquake, the U.S. Ambassador to Haiti, Ken Merten,
is quoted at a State Department briefing on February 12, saying
�In terms of humanitarian aid delivery�frankly, it�s� working really
well, and I believe that this will be something that people will
be able to look back on in the future as a model for how we�ve been
able to sort ourselves out as donors on the ground and responding
to an earthquake.�
What? Haiti is a model of how
the international government and donor community should respond
to an earthquake? The Ambassador must be overworked and need
some R&R. Look at the facts.
The UN Office for the Coordination
of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reported February 11 there are still
1.2 million people living in �spontaneous settlements� in and around
Port au Prince as a result of the January 12 earthquake. These
spontaneous settlements are sprawling camps of homeless Haitian
children and families living on the ground under sheets.
Over 300,000 are in camps in Carrefour,
nearly 200,000 in Port au Prince, and over 100,000 each in Delmas,
Petitionville and Leogane according to the UN.
About 25,000 people are camped out
on one golf course in Petitionville. Hundreds of thousands of others
are living in soccer fields, church yards,
on hillsides, in gullies, and even on the strips of land in the
middle of the street. The UN
has identified over 300 such spontaneous settlements. The
Red Cross reports there are over 700.
The UN reported that barely one in
five of the people in camps have received tents or tarps as of February
11. Eighty percent of the hundreds of thousands of children
and families still live on the ground under sheets.
Many of these camps are huge. Nineteen
of these homeless camps in the Port au Prince area together house
180,000 people. More than half of these camps are so spontaneous
that there is no organization in the camp to even comprehensively
report their needs.
Another half a million people have
left Port au Prince, most to the countryside. As a result there
are significant food problems in the countryside. About 168,000
internally displaced people are living along the border with the
Dominican Republic. Many are with families. Others are
in �spontaneous settlements� of up to a 1000 people.
People
living in these densely populated camps will be asked to move to
more organized settlements outside the city. Relocation, says
the UN, will be on a voluntary basis.
The U.S. Ambassador knows full well
there are 900 or so aid agencies are on the ground in Haiti. Coordination
and communication between those
agencies and between them and the Haitian
government continues to be a very serious challenge.
Though
many people are trying hard to meet the survival needs Haiti, no
one besides the Ambassador dares say that it is a model of how to
respond. Partners in Health director Dr. Louise Ivers reported on
the very same day that �there is more and more misery� in Port au
Prince as fears of typhoid and dysentery haunt the camps as the
rainy season looms.
But the Haitian spirit prevails. Everyone
who has been to Haiti since the earthquake reports inspiring stories
of Haitians helping Haitians despite the tragically inadequate response
of the Haitian government and the international community. That
spirit is something people should admire. Let me finish with
a story that illustrates.
One orphanage outside of Port au Prince,
home to 57 children, was promised a big tent so the children would
no longer have to sleep under the stars. The tent arrived
but without poles to hold it up. The same group was promised
food from UNICEF. Twelve days later, no food had arrived.
They improvised and constructed scaffolding to create an awning
over the mattresses lying on the dirt. They are finding food
from anywhere they can. �We�re holding on,� said the Haitian director
Etienne Bruny, �We�re used to difficult times.�
Haitians are holding on despite the
inadequate humanitarian response. They are the model.
BlackCommentator.com Columnist Bill Quigley is a human rights lawyer and law professor
at Loyola University, New Orleans. He has been an active public interest lawyer
since 1977 and has served as counsel with a wide range of public
interest organizations on issues including Katrina social justice
issues, public housing, voting rights, death penalty, living wage,
civil liberties, educational reform, constitutional rights and civil
disobedience. He has litigated numerous cases with the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational
Fund, Inc., the Advancement Project, and with the ACLU of Louisiana,
for which he served as General Counsel for over 15 years. Bill is also legal director of the Center for Constitutional
Rights and one of the team who represented ACORN in their successful
federal constitutional challenge. You can read the opinion at www.crrjustice.org. Click
here to contact Mr. Quigley. |