Showing posts with label Reconstruction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reconstruction. Show all posts

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Donors plan to put up $3.8 bln for Haiti rebuilding (our comments)

_______________________
OtherStreams' Comments:

1. Full support to H. E. Mr. President René Préval and H. E. Mr. Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive. They are the democratic elected Government of Haiti, they should have the first and last words on everything.

2. It is getting really irritating and offensive the insistence in labeling the Government of Haiti as corrupt and/or weak.
  1. They can not be labeled as corrupts - neither this Government nor their predecessors - as they not even see the color of the money that come to Haiti, nor now neither before the earthquake.

    Everything comes from outside to outsiders' organizations, most of them well intentioned, I hope, but with a clear sidestepping on the Government of Haiti.

  2. They can not be labeled as weak.

    1. First, before the earthquake, because of the progressive "underpowerment" of the State Machine by both external and internal forces.

    2. Second, after the earthquake, they were also victims with all their structures destroyed and many of their collaborators lost. It takes a time to recover the Governance ability from scratch beginning from a small improvised Police Station.

      I could hear the record of Mr. Préval statement hours after the catastrophe and his Government, since than, is doing all of the possible given the situation.

  3. I understand that Haiti Government host George Bush for a while since this is not the time for hostilities of all kinds. But I take it, personally, as a lack of respectfulness demonstration and, thus, a huge offense.

    I put in the account of the earthquake itself less then 25% of the destruction toll.

    The rest 75% we owe to the policies imposed to Haiti, most of them by this man's Government.

    1. We would be glad, instead, if Haiti would be receiving H. E. The Former (even without finishing his mandate) President Jean-Bertrand Aristide in a mission aimed at comfort-giving, consultancy-help, and "politicless" (for a while) peacekeeping, since it gets the negotiated approval of the Haitian (and solely Haitian) authorities.

      It may come through his former strong relations with Mr. Préval and the desire of both in putting Haiti's recovery above any other collective or individual interests.  

      These issues is being kept hidden but will emerge.

      And it is impossible to rebuild a nation without full transparency.

      The hidden agendas may mislead and undermine the whole process.


  4. Somebody is missing since ever: The Sovereign People of Haiti. We need to listen and absorb whatever they have to say.

  5. The external US pressure for legislative elections is unacceptable.

    Haiti's people and authorities have the unique right and the duty of taking this decision alone without anybody's' help, opinion, suggestion or moreover this unthinkable kind of pressure.
____________________

Donors plan to put up $3.8 bln for Haiti rebuilding

Go to Original (Reuters AlertNet) >

18 Mar 2010 21:21:33 GMT
Source: Reuters
 
* Target commitment discussed before March 31 conference 
 
* Calls for good governance, transparency, elections 
 
* Wide donor support for debt relief, IADB head says (Adds comments from IADB chief, paragraphs 13-14) By Manuel Jimenez 
 
SANTO DOMINGO, March 18 (Reuters) - International donors are aiming to provide $3.8 billion over 18 months to help Haiti rebuild after its Jan. 12 earthquake, according to officials and experts preparing a high-level donors conference. 
 
The initial short-term target figure came in a statement released late on Wednesday after a two-day meeting in the Dominican Republic of representatives of Haiti's government, donor nations, multilateral lenders, U.N. agencies and aid groups. 
 
The preparatory meeting, ahead of a scheduled March 31 donors conference in New York, set out the broad outlines of a reconstruction strategy for the Caribbean nation whose economy and infrastructure were decimated by the quake. 
 
The government of Haiti, the poorest state in the Western Hemisphere, says at least 222,570 people and possibly more than 300,000 were killed in what some experts are calling the deadliest natural disaster of modern times. "Donors are committing to provide $3.8 billion to finance the reconstruction and recovery of Haiti's priority needs, over a period of 18 months, as indicated in the Post-Disaster Needs Assessment (PDNA)," said the statement from the joint chairmen of the Santo Domingo experts' meeting. 
 
Dominican Republic President Leonel Fernandez and Haitian Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive chaired the two days of discussions that brought together 40 nations and institutions. 
 
The World Bank's director for the Caribbean, Yvonne Tsikata, described $3.8 billion as an "initial figure" contained in the PDNA document draft. "It's a short-term target. It's work in progress," she said in a conference call with reporters. 
 
She said concrete commitments by donors would be made at the one-day "pledging conference" in New York on March 31. 
 
The Santo Domingo meeting also announced a planned commitment to give Haiti's government an additional $350 million in direct budgetary support for 2010. 
 
The World Bank's board on Thursday approved a $65 million grant to Haiti for restoring key central bank and finance ministry functions, and essential infrastructure. 
 
To manage the long-term reconstruction, the experts in Santo Domingo proposed the creation of a Multi-Donors Trust Fund (MDTF) to be administered by a steering committee jointly formed by the Haitian government and donors. 
 
The World Bank would supervise operation of the fund. In the report that it presented to the Santo Domingo meeting, Haiti's government assessed the damage caused by the quake at more than $7.7 billion dollars. 
 
It estimated a total of $11.5 billion would be needed for reconstruction. 
 
SUPPORT FOR DEBT FORGIVENESS 
 
Speaking in an interview with Reuters, Inter-American Development Bank head Luis Moreno said on Thursday there was also wide support among donor countries to cancel about $1.2 billion in debts on Haiti's books. "Most of our shareholders have expressed a desire to do a debt relief of the outstanding amount owed by Haiti, of which the IADB has $441 million," Moreno said. He spoke ahead of the annual meetings of the IADB in Cancun, Mexico, this weekend. 
 
Despite concerns about levels of government corruption in Haiti, which have stymied past aid efforts, the administration of Haitian President Rene Preval has insisted it should have the ultimate say in the reconstruction of the country. 
 
Preval said on Tuesday that the Haitian presidency should have veto power over any reconstruction projects. 
 
He has angrily described as "arrogant" U.S. State Department allegations of widespread corruption in his government. 
 
His irritation has threatened to sour ties with Haiti's main quake relief partner, the United States, which has sent thousands of soldiers, doctors and aid workers to help. 
 
Two former U.S. presidents, Bill Clinton, named by the United Nations as coordinator of the international relief effort, and George W. Bush, will visit Haiti on Monday. 
 
The experts' statement said the donors fund would seek to ease pressure on the overcrowded and wrecked capital Port-au-Prince by supporting development outside of it. It would also seek to strengthen the private sector. 
 
The document added that a commitment to good governance and transparency by the Haitian government was essential. 
 
Occupying the western half of the island of Hispaniola, the former French colony of Haiti won independence in 1804 through a slave revolt and has had a history of uprisings, coups, dictatorships, poverty and social upheaval. 
 
The statement stipulated "a commitment to hold elections in Haiti as soon as possible to avoid a political vacuum." 
 
Preval has said he would not seek to extend his term beyond its scheduled conclusion on Feb. 11, 2011, and says he is confident that legislative elections -- originally scheduled for Feb. 28 -- can be reorganized in good time. 
 
(Additional reporting by Lesley Wroughton, Writing by Pascal Fletcher; Editing by Eric Beech)
 

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Haiti reconstruction cost may near $14 billion: IADB


Photo
Tue, Feb 16 2010
By Pascal Fletcher

PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) - The cost of rebuilding impoverished Haiti after last month's catastrophic earthquake could reach nearly $14 billion, making it proportionately the most destructive natural disaster in modern times, economists at the Inter-American Development Bank said on Tuesday.

Their study, which takes into account the magnitude of the January 12 disaster, the number of fatalities and Haiti's population and per capita GDP, raises previous damage estimates from the quake to between $8 billion and $14 billion.

The IADB economists said the Haitian earthquake was especially destructive when viewed in relation to the Caribbean country's population of nearly 10 million and to its already weak and impoverished economy.

The quake also struck the capital city Port-au-Prince, the center of the country's commerce, government and communications, destroying or damaging the presidential palace, the national cathedral, churches and government buildings.

In the IADB study, economists Andrew Powell, Eduardo Cavallo and Oscar Becerra calculated a base estimate of $8.1 billion in damages estimated for a 250,000 dead-or-missing toll.

But they estimated this figure was likely to be at the low end and concluded that an estimate of $13.9 billion damages was within the statistical margin of error.

The IADB study said the Haitian government had reported 230,000 dead as of February 10.

"While the results are subject to many caveats, the study confirms that the Haitian earthquake is likely to be the most destructive natural disaster in modern times, when viewed in relation to the size of the Haiti's population and its economy," the IADB economists said.

They added that in this respect, the Haitian quake was much more destructive than the Indonesian Tsunami of 2004, whose damages were estimated at just over $5 billion, according to the study. Haiti's disaster also caused five times more deaths per million inhabitants than the second-ranking natural killer, the 1972 earthquake in Nicaragua, the study added.

But a detailed accounting of the cost of Haiti's reconstruction still had to be drawn up, it said.

"RETHINK" HAITI

The IADB study did not include in its comparison Hurricane Katrina in 2005, which slammed into the U.S. Gulf Coast, flooding New Orleans, killing about 1,200 people and inflicting heavy industry and property losses.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center estimated losses from Katrina at around $75 billion, but in comparison to

U.S. population and economic power, Haiti's earthquake hit a country that was already by far the poorest in the Western Hemisphere.

Led by the United States and Canada, foreign governments, multilateral institutions and private groups have been channeling tens of millions of dollars of aid into Haiti to help with its recovery. The IADB study said excellent coordination would be required for its most efficient use.

"Unfortunately, past experience suggests despite higher aid inflows after disasters, the growth impact of major disasters remains highly persistent," it said.

The study added that if not properly managed to avoid bottlenecks and distortions, the foreign aid inflow could hurt Haiti's private economic activity and export sector, which it said had significant growth potential.

"The international community will need to consider how best to support private activities to ensure the negative growth impact is minimized and to ensure sustainable growth once reconstruction activities start to diminish," it said.

Haitian President Rene Preval said on Monday after holding talks with visiting Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper that his government was discussing the creation of a common fund for Haiti's recovery to be managed in partnership with donors.

Dominican Republic President Leonel Fernandez has estimated this fund could total $10 billion over five years, although other leaders say a decade will be needed for rebuilding.

"We have to take this opportunity, not to reconstruct Haiti, but to rethink and remodel it," Preval said, adding any recovery program should bring development to rural areas.

Preval said care should also be taken to ensure that the huge influx of foreign aid did not compete with locally produced goods. It should be channeled toward the creation of jobs in activities like the clean-up of roads, so that people can earn money to buy the things they needed, he added.

(Additional reporting by Tom Brown in Miami; Editing by Philip Barbara)

Monday, March 8, 2010

Give Haiti control over its recovery



SINCE JANUARY’S devastating earthquake in Haiti, well-meaning experts have proposed an abundance of short-term and long-term recovery solutions.

They ask why aid delivery has been so slow, why previous development plans for Haiti have rarely been successful, and why billions of dollars in funding over decades have not improved conditions for the most impoverished people in our hemisphere.

Some blame the government of Haiti, while others, including the organizations we represent, often point fingers at the international community.

The simple answer is that those who have the greatest stake in rebuilding Haiti, Haitians themselves, don’t now and never have had a real seat at the table.

While Haitian resilience has been duly recognized around the world, few appear to be interested in talking to Haitians about how to rebuild their communities and how the billions likely to be pledged to their country will be used. And no one is talking about what recourse Haitians will have if promised projects are never completed, or worse, pledged money never arrives. 

Unfortunately, past failures can be found in every community across Haiti - water projects that were promised but never built, resulting in water-borne illness and death; food aid that was delivered, but spoiled or sold in markets below the prices asked by local farmers; non-government organizations that started educational programs, but then shifted priorities, leaving children without access to schools.

From our perspectives as a Haitian-American and an international human rights advocate, both working to protect the most basic of human rights, including the rights to health, water, and food, we know the people of Haiti not only deserve, but are entitled to better lives.

The solution is simple, practical, and driven by human rights. Representatives of donor states, government agencies, NGOs, and international organizations should meet with Haitians to discuss their communities’ needs, be it a water source, a school, a road or health center, and then determine specifics like where it should be constructed, how it will be maintained and when it will be completed so communities know what to expect before breaking ground. If it is behind schedule, poorly maintained, or never built, community members should be able to report back to an independent body that is partnered with the Haitian government and can track all such complaints.

In the short-term, the international community and the Haitian government could create a traveling body to help community members track any problems with current projects. Information gathered through this body would be accessible to the Haitian people, a critical first step toward ensuring that the principles of participation, transparency, and accountability are more than mere slogans. In the future, community members could work with their government to develop a more permanent monitoring infrastructure across the country.

This month, all concerned eyes will be on the United Nations-hosted donors conference convening in New York. Experts will gather to discuss development strategies and donor countries will make public pledges of support to Haiti. In addition to the few elected leaders and a handful of NGO representatives who will speak to the donor states, representatives of the people we know and work with should be present and heard.

These are people who, after suffering untold loss, still live in the streets of Port-au-Prince, starving nearly two months after the earthquake, or live in rural areas dealing with skyrocketing food prices because of the influx of earthquake survivors into their communities, or are among the millions who suffered without access to clean water long before the earthquake hit.

Those who have worked in Haiti and other places around the world and have suffered large-scale death and destruction know that successful long-term recovery needs to be driven by the people most intimately affected. 

Beyond the enormous funding and international experts needed to rebuild Haiti, it is time to make a new pledge - to heed and support the experts who can truly rebuild Haiti, the Haitian people.


Loune Viaud is the director of strategic planning and operations at Zanmi Lasante/Partners in Health in Haiti. Monika Kalra Varma is the director of the Robert F. Kennedy Center for Human Rights.  

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

'The Ebony Phoenix' & 'The Second Enlightenment' | Part 01

(Rush Written)
To be Continued...


Part 01
The Ebony Phoenix & The Second Enlightenment
The OlderQuake, The OtherQuakes, The Others'Quakes, 
The EarthQuake & Quaking The World!

The Portuguese Empire through its own science joined by Islamic and Jewish sciences working together, and other European brains (Dutch, Spanish, Italian) made really come true the old idea of a spherical Earth.

Portuguese Sea

“Oh salty sea, how much of your salt
Are tears of Portugal!

Because we crossed you, so many mothers wept,
So many sons prayed in vain!
So many brides remained unmarried
That you might be ours, oh sea!

Was it worthwhile? All is worthwhile
When the spirit is not small.
He who wants to go beyond the Cape.
Has to go beyond pain.

God to the sea peril and the abyss has given 
But it was in it that He mirrored heaven.”

Fernando Pessoa (Portuguese Poet)

Through the opened Oceans a New World was born.

Together with it – as always, within the onus-bonus-onus wheel of History – from light, darkness was born: brute colonialism as the second ugliest son of feudalism, and ethnic slavery as since then and forever the ugliest one.

One place in the New World detached from the rest: the colony of Saint-Domingue, the richest source of the French small Elite wealth.

Darkness had conquered Europe through the fires of Inquisition and the cooling of thoughts (when the “all is well” philosophers begun to appraise that world as the best possible world “under God”).

As always, within the bonus-onus-bonus wheel of History, when unanimity emerges, contradiction installs.

And some new few thinkers had begun to put some tiny new light on that status quo.

Suddenly, the earth and brains big shake came without advice.

Lisbon, Portugal, 1755, November 1st, “All Saints Day” celebration, around 10½ in the morning.

An unprecedented earthquake came, followed by an enormous Tsunami.

Tears everywhere sunk lives, rules and dogmas.

Fires everywhere enlightened brains, hearts and souls.

All-Saints-Day! All the churches were plenty of people.

Most of them, unaware, made their lives last pray.

It was the most devastating earthquake from the history of Europe.

It would change the World forever.

As today, the World was living at the edge, at a crossroads.

By one side, the Philosophy of Optimism, the full domain of the Church, the Feudal system and a very small noblesse’s immense affronting wealth.

By other hand the emerging power of a new class so-called Bourgeois, and arising questionings about Imperial powers and its rulers, and about the Rome’s Church truth-owning omnipotence, and presence.

The impact was tremendous within the Portuguese Empire and elsewhere.

It could not be different as the big Metropolis of five continents possessions was destroyed by an earthquake followed by innumerous aftershocks and an enormous Tsunami whose waves could be watched in some parts of Americas.

The Portuguese catastrophe awakened a myriad of controversies about religion, nature, philosophy, government and launched the first stronger lights towards the 'XVIII Century Enlightment'.

The Inquisition saying that the tragedy was due for the Portuguese’s sins, while the French future Encyclopaedists arguing how it could be if most of the people – about 200,000 – died exactly because they were in the places for seeking salvation, The Lord’s Homes, that fallen down on their heads.

Voltaire, and Kant – amongst many others intellectuals - were some of the most active questioners. Tons of writings and debates were produced.

Remarkable was the reaction of the French philosopher Voltaire (François-Marie Arouet).

Voltaire responded to the Lisbon cataclysm, coming shortly after another deadly earthquake in Lima, Peru (1746), in a series of letters, a lengthy poem and the novella Candide, questioning blind faith in god and the fatalism that the then-dominant philosophy of “Optimism” engendered.

In the preface to his “Poem on the Disaster in Lisbon” (1756) Voltaire wrote mockingly:

“All is well, the heirs of the dead
will increase their fortunes,
masons will make money rebuilding the buildings,
beasts feed off the bodies buried in the debris:
this is the necessary effect of the necessary causes; 
your particular misfortune is nothing, 
you will contribute to the general welfare.”

In Candide (1759), Voltaire reported how, “After the earthquake, which had destroyed three-fourths of the city of Lisbon, the sages of that country could think of no means more effectual to preserve the kingdom from utter ruin than to entertain the people with an auto-da-fé [faith ritual], it having been decided by the University of Coimbra, that the burning of a few people alive by a slow fire, and with great ceremony, is an infallible preventive of earthquakes.”

Candide’s mentor, the optimist philosopher Pangloss, opines that it is all for the good, “all this is for the very best end, for if there is a volcano at Lisbon it could be in no other spot.” But when Pangloss is hanged for heresy, the earth shakes again. Candide laments:

“If this is the best of all possible worlds, what are the others like?”

All those debates lead to an emergent comprehension of ‘the nature of the own nature itself’.

That it could happen elsewhere where no one would be there to suffer or even notice the quake.

The earthquakes and other nature’s manifestations begun to be studied through evolving methods leading to our days' Geology and Earth Sciences so forth.

Religion, philosophy, politics, private property and everything related to life and society begun to be questioned.

A boiling brainstorm flowed alive until culminating on the reported as the most important fact alone of the whole following centuries.

Which was actually completed five years later, and somewhere else.

Coming at a time when bourgeois forces were growing strong enough to burst the straitjacket of feudalism, the Lisbon disaster played a key role in the Enlightenment, intellectual forerunner for the French Revolution of 1789-1804.

1789-1804. The Fall of Bastille, and the victory of The French Revolution whose endurance could not be kept for so long, and few years later the dream seemed to be over under Napoleon ruling.

1791-1804. The seeds of The French Revolution floated over the Atlantic (on maybe the same waves that crossed the ocean when of the Lisbon Tsunami) and arrived in an island that gave them good soil, better climate to grow, and brave gardeners.

The dream reborn “noir” and The French Revolution, actually, only could come true within that land and by the deadlock-tied hands of the oppressed by the own France.

The Liberty Flag regained the skies carried by the Negro strong hands of Saint-Domingue in The Haitian Revolution.

After years of restless fighting against the most powerful empires on earth – as England, Spain, and France - the dreamers won, the dream was not over.

The ideals once expressed in the 1789 “Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen” could breathe again.

1804. 
‘Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité’, 
‘L’Union Fait la Force’ 
et L‘Independence ou Mort’!

All burning hearts and minds came to light through 'The Only Successful Slaves’ Revolt of History’, which could proclaim ‘The First Free Nation of The New World’.

A new Nation was born, freed from external and internal rulers: no more a colony under a Metropolis, no more slavery under the heavy wills of ‘people that owned people’.

And an enormous influence, a loud dense voice – not only inspirational but also material and pragmatic -, arose soaring and being spread around the whole Western Hemisphere towards the ears of the entire Old World.

From 'The Mountains beyond Mountains’ brigades went to help the United States Independence.

The ‘Black Jacobins’ struggle echoes won the freedom for all the slaves in the vast French colonial possessions.

The ‘Repiblik Dayiti’ took over the neighbor island-sharing Spanish colony and abolished the slavery there.

A defeated Simon Bolivar have found twice in ‘The Pearl of Antilles’, abridge, shelter, rest, support, food, ammunition, money, ships, weapons, and soldiers to come back and make the independence of the Spanish southern colonies in America. In exchange, only one duty: the end of slavery there.

‘The Black Republic’ sent also troops to fight in The United States Civil War with highlighted participation as in the Savannah Battle.

Defeating the frightening Napoleon troops twice Haiti opened the doors for France giving up in Americas and made feasible the Louisiana Province deal when United States bought very cheap what represents around 23% of its today’s territory and without which there would be no path for the West Conquer.

The Saint-Domingue achievements and tales had a strong impact at both the anti-slavery fighters and the slaves-owners around the other countries where slavery still survived, as in Brazil for instance.

The anti-slavery fighters got hope and will strengthening from the Caribbean History. Talks got hotter, riots emerged, and the fight at a whole gained momentum.

The slave-owners, by other hand, felt threatened, and from their fears some slavery-smoothing new rules were designed to avoid what they used to call “The Saint-Domingue Catastrophe”.

And since then, since 1804 – a year avoided by many "official” historians for a long time – the claims against discriminations about race, origin, faith and so on evolved through time and space with crescent energy.

But with all those merits Haiti was awarded with the very strange prize of the outside emptiness and indifference: no trade, no talk, no support, no recognition, no deal.

And this is the best part as the other is fulfilled with sanctions, isolation, invasions, dictatorship sponsoring, trade traps, and the worst kind of the worst prejudice.

Since then until now, the History of Haiti have become the most extreme and perfect synthesis of History both of the West Hemisphere and of the South Hemisphere.

And wouldn’t be that exaggerated to say that Haiti became the most extreme and perfect synthesis of the whole world so-called Modern Era History: the endless struggle between the Ubuntu Spirit and the Colonialist Starvation.

The 2010 tragedy was not a seismic one.

It is a fully historical, social, economic, political, geopolitical, and, uttermost, human tragedy.

The Quake itself was just the trigger for a two centuries along arming bomb.

Aftermath, we should assure that 'The Ebony Phoenix’ will fly again.

And higher.

And we should align our wings together.

As from Lisbon 1755, from Port-au-Prince 2010 here comes the light.

By the second time in history, the Planet is getting smaller again.

Not through ships but through chips.

The Human Kind, again, is living by the edge, facing the crossroads once more.

Nature has been advising us.

Economy has been advising us.

Yet before both big ongoing alerts, some bright people had listened forwards, as elephants on Tsunamis.

Since some years ago those gifted eyes could envision the urge and design some alternatives on paths for achieving this New New World to come.

This is the time for make the changes happen.

The lessons, we still know them in depth.

Time has come for actually learning from them.

Haiti is the Time Mark, the Turning Point, the Energy born from Earth Revolutions, the Energy born from Peoples’ Revolutions, the Energy born from the Resistance of Peoples that unconditionally always refused to fall on their knees, the Energy born from Peoples’ Resilient Self-Determination.

There is the Energy to Empower the ‘Second Enlightenment’.

In Haiti, History planted the deep roots for Humanity growth.

And this growth means a Whole New Breakthrough Framework on Human Relationships (within, with others, and with Earth), and a Whole Paradigm Shift on World’s Socio-Politic-Economic-Environmental Order.

Haiti’s fate to begin again from scratch is the World’s unique chance to begin again for better.

Again, Aysians will be (this time, I hope, hands by hands with everybody else)… Haitians will be 'The Avengers of The New World'.

And then… And so… And so what?

The best planning tools for the best planners and achievers are not inside but outside the head: two ears willing to listen.

As Haiti is beginning again, let’s begin from the beginning...

To be Continued...

Friday, February 26, 2010

Brazil even more commited with Haiti. President Lula in Port-au-Prince.


"Haiti needs the forgiveness of his debt to rebuild the country"

President Lula called on creditor nations to forgive Haiti debt which reaches US$ 1.3 billion. That would be - according to Lula - a way to allow the Haitian government to take the money that would be to pay off the debt and apply on the reconstruction of the country. Lula defended the measure in a speech made on Thursday (Feb 25) in Port-au-Prince after signing of three acts - the construction of water reservoirs, food production and improvement of public schools network - together with the President of Haiti H.E. René Préval.

Lula recalled that earlier in this week, during the summit meetings held in Cancun, Mexico, he could witness the willingness of the Countries to help the Haitian people. Just before, at the meeting of {UNASUR} the Member Countries discussed the donation of over $ 100 million for the Haitian government. Lula stressed by several times that the aid to Haiti should be done following the needs defined by the local authorities.

Shoe vendor on a street in Port-au-Prince, capital of Haiti. Lula advocates debt relief for Haiti that the country can invest in its rebuilding.
Photo: Roberto Cordeiro / Blog do Planalto

The Brazilian president flew over the capital accompanied by Haitian President Préval. According to Lula, one of the priorities is the removal of rubble in towns and the lifting up of 50 to 60 modern tents per location in order to gather the families. Préval explained about his will on importing tractors and machinery from the Dominican Republic and the United States for the task force. According to the Haitian president, the machinery at the capital should be moved to the countryside.

"If Brazil has already built a very strong policy compromised on Haiti's close future, after seeing with my own eyes what happens to Haiti, we will do very much more. Things are even much more serious than we imagined. In this moment of pain and despair is exactly when we need to raise our heads and believe that Haiti will come out stronger of all this. A people that always have kept the dignity to fight. The first country to build Liberty in this Hemisphere will not bow to this setback. Men and women of Haiti will know with much more strength to build a fairer country for their own people, "he said.

Source: Presidential Palace (Planalto) Blog,

Rains threaten more Haiti misery

Go to Original (Al Jazeera English) >

Friday, February 26, 2010
07:20 Mecca time, 04:20 GMT


The first heavy rains have hit Haiti since last month's devastating earthquake struck, swamping makeshift camps that house hundreds of thousands of homeless and raising fears of landslides and disease.

The rains late on Thursday came as forecasters warned of a large storm heading in Haiti's direction that could strike over the weekend.

More than a million people were made homeless by the deadly January 12 quake, many of them now living in flimsy makeshift shelters that offer little protection from heavy rains.

Relief workers say the approaching wet season and the hurricane season later this year will likely add to misery for quake survivors struggling to rebuild their lives.

Even before the quake Haiti often suffered badly during the rain and hurricane seasons as a result of its poor infrastructure.

In 2008 a series of storms killed more than 800 people.

Now in the capital Port-au-Prince, some 770,000 quake survivors are living in makeshift camps and with the onset of rains, the threat of disease and infection poses another great challenge.

'Huge challenge'

"We have a huge challenge in terms of just providing emergency shelter - something that we feel that if we put all of our weight behind, as we are doing right now, we will be able (to do)," Kristen Knutson, a spokeswoman for the UN office that is coordinating the international relief effort, told Reuters news agency.

Thursday's deluge hit as relief officials changed strategy on dealing with quake
survivors, delaying plans to build big refugee camps outside the capital.

Instead, they want the homeless to pack up their tents and return to destroyed neighbourhoods.

Gerald-Emile Brun, an architect with the Haitian government's reconstruction committee, told Reuters that "everything has to be done before the start of the rainy season, and we will not be able to do it".

Brun also suggested that Haitians may largely be left to fend for themselves.

Haiti meanwhile is continuing to count the economic cost of the quake.

Call to cancel debt

On Thursday the country's president, Rene Preval, said government assessments had indicated that the disaster would cost the already poor country up to 50 per cent of its gross domestic product.

"This earthquake... led to the deaths of 200,000 to 300,000 people and destroyed from 35 to 50 per cent of the GDP," he said.

Preval was speaking reporters after meeting Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, his Brazilian counterpart at a UN-Brazilian military base in Port-au-Prince.



During his brief visit, Lula called on the international community to cancel Haiti's debt, and officials from the two governments signed agreements to aid Haitian farmers and schools, which were hard hit in the quake.

According to the United Nations, 5,000 schools were damaged or destroyed in Haiti, which was already the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere before the catastrophe struck.

Lula also referred to a recent South American summit's pledge of $300m in aid for Haiti, including an agreement to create a $100m fund to help the government with immediate needs.
 

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

This is not a Post. It is a Gift! [ ♪ ♫ ♪ ]

------------------------------------------------
Go to Original (SF Gate) >
------------------------------------------------
The "This is Haiti" public service announcements
can be heard at www.greenff.org/
------------------------------------------------
"Alan Lomax In Haiti" box set: thehaitibox.blogspot.com/
------------------------------------------------

1930s recordings preserve 

Haiti's cultural wealth

Wednesday, February 24, 2010
(02-24) 04:00 PST MIAMI, (AP) --

 

At 21, Alan Lomax went to Haiti and recorded its citizens making music — songs about Voodoo, carnival politics, children's games and the first airplanes crisscrossing its Caribbean skies in the late 1930s.

He preserved the sounds on aluminum discs for the Library of Congress, but they were largely forgotten for seven decades as they sat in the library's archives.

Recently discovered, they were compiled into a box set released last fall. Haitian music scholars called it a "cultural archive" that documents the daily triumphs that get missed whenever a crisis in Haiti makes the news.

The catastrophic earthquake last month that killed more than 200,000 people was the latest crisis.

Now, the set's curator hopes "Alan Lomax in Haiti" will teach people that Haiti's culture remains intact, even when so many of its arts institutions have collapsed.

Music from the 10-disc box set, released by Harte Recordings, is featured in three radio public service announcements seeking aid for Haiti.


"It's too easy for people to just periodically feel sorry for Haiti," Gage Averill said. "Very few people except those who travel to Haiti understand just how much Haiti has to offer, how lovely a country it is, how generous a country it is."

Lomax was a newlywed ethnomusicologist when he set out to record the music of Haiti in 1936 and 1937, just following a 15-year American military occupation of Haiti.

He lugged his equipment into the mountains beyond the capital, Port-au-Prince, in search of ordinary people instead of polished performers and ended up with 1,500 recordings.

Ultimately, digital copies will be returned to Haiti, as some of Lomax's recordings from other Caribbean countries have been returned to those islands.

He found a wide range of music, from Boy Scout troops, religious processions, dances and bands of sugar cane cutters who brought back rhythms from Cuba.

Many of the Haitian Creole lyrics convey the impact of poverty and life in close quarters.

There also are songs about Haiti's global isolation after its slave rebellion and French ballads.

"The French romances (ballads) are not about courtly affairs and knights, but about the first time someone saw an airplane," Averill said.

When the earthquake struck near Port-au-Prince on Jan. 12, the box set's collaborators looked for a way to use the music to help the relief effort.

It could show a different picture of Haiti than just a country of rubble; it also could immediately restore something that was lost, they thought.

"My feeling was, at a time like this, people don't just think of bread and water all the time," Lomax's daughter, Anna Lomax Wood, said. "They think of everything that is jeopardized in their lives — everything in their culture."

Actor Fisher Stevens and Kimberly Green, president of the Miami-based Green Family Foundation, produced the radio PSAs.

Like other urgent appeals for donations after the earthquake, they feature celebrities — Naomi Watts, Ben Stiller and Sting — seeking pledges to The Clinton Foundation and Partners in Health.

"This is Haiti," the celebrities say over three music clips selected from the box set.

They note the country's stature as the first black republic in the world after a slave rebellion succeeded in 1804, then its proximity to the United States.

Only in closing do they note Haiti's poverty and previous disasters.

The three songs selected for the PSAs share a sense of danger, Averill said.

In each, the singers call out to the gods for help, but they also prepare to take matters into their own hands if an adversary comes to close.

In a carnival song, a community girds itself against an unseen adversary.

A song from a Voodoo ceremony implores the gods to soothe some trauma and relieve the singers' agony.

Lastly, in a procession of sacred music, the band honors a particular supporter with a refrain that's still familiar, more than 70 years after it was recorded.

The refrain of one song indicates some beliefs have not changed much since Lomax's time. "After God, the priest,"   a rara band sings, honoring the entities they considered supportive. After the earthquake, some Haitians uttered a similar refrain, describing the entities most likely to help them: "After God, the United Nations."

Green said she hopes to broadcast Lomax's recordings on Haitian radio stations as they come back on the air, to inspire the preservation of culture even if museums and concert halls won't be rebuilt for years.

"I hope it can provide some solace to people, some strength," Lomax Wood said.

 

------------------------------------------------
Go to Original (SF Gate) >

------------------------------------------------

The "This is Haiti" public service announcements
can be heard at www.greenff.org/
------------------------------------------------

"Alan Lomax In Haiti" box set: thehaitibox.blogspot.com/
------------------------------------------------

Monday, February 22, 2010

Brazil plans to build hydroelectric plant in Haití

Go to Original [Spanish] at TeleSur >  

The Brazilian leader said the hydro was designed by the Brazilian Army specialists.

He also said the energy to be produced by his facility would help the reactivation of the country's industrial sector.

He announced that he will meet with President René Préval to report on it and listen to the needs of the Haitians after the devastating earthquake of January.

Brazilian President, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, announced Monday the will for construction of a hydroelectric plant in Haiti, to relieve the severe energy problems the Caribbean country is going through since the earthquake measuring 7.3 last January 12. 

"We [Latin America] are willing to do whatever is needed to rebuild Haiti along with other European countries, subject to the coordination of United Nations," Lula said on his radio show on Mondays, Coffee with the President.

Lula, who will travel to Port-au-Prince Thursday, said the hydro-power project is already designed by the Brazilian Army and said that this plant will ensure the energy necessary to install industry in the country. 

He said the reservoir will also serve to irrigate crops what will help Haitian agriculture. 

"I will see with our Armed Forces, which coordinate the Stabilization Mission of the Organization of United Nations (UN) in Haiti (MINUSTAH), that it becomes a priority, because Haiti is needing the world solidarity, and now the world should do what didn't in the past", he said.

Lula said his trip will be in solidarity with the Haitian people and to tell the government of this country that Brazil will continue to be supportive.

He recalled the approval of a grant of about $ 200 million to to help rebuild this nation.

"That amount is in addition to the $ 15 million that we decided to put through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in the recovery plan for Haiti," Lula added.  

Speaking at the First Summit Mexico-CARICOM (Caribbean Community Countries), Préval said the rising death toll, established around 217 thousand, could rise to 300 thousand when they finish the tasks of lifting the debris. 

He also recalled that thousands of people remain without shelter and without jobs thus they need international help, not only to rebuild their homes, but to rehabilitate an economy that has also been devastated and urges now for jobs generation.

Préval said that at present the most pressing is the attention to the displaced before the impending rainy season and noted that in the future centralization should be avoided .


x-----

OtherSreams note: Brazil has more than 60% of its energetic matrix coming from hydro-powered energy, being one of the most specialized countries within the sector and having much of the biggest world plants totally built on own-developed technologies.
-----x

Peter Hallward (earlier TODAY) on “Damming the Flood: Haiti, Aristide, and the Politics of Containment”

 
“Unless prevented by renewed popular mobilisation in both Haiti and beyond,  the perverse international emphasis on security will continue to distort the reconstruction effort, and with it the configuration of Haitian politics for some time to come.” 

“What is already certain is that  if further militarization proceeds unchecked, the victims of the January earthquake won’t be the only avoidable casualties of 2010.” 



Peter Hallward is the author of Damming the Flood: Haiti, Aristide, and the Politics of Containment and a professor of Modern European Philosophy at Middlesex University.

Kim Ives is journalist with the newspaper Haiti Liberté, speaking from Port-au-Prince.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Could a Start-Up Competition Help Haiti?

Go to Original (The New York Times) >

By LORA KOLODNY 

Could a nation still lacking basic resources and infrastructure and still reeling from a devastating earthquake benefit from entrepreneurial education and cash grants for small businesses? Startup Weekend, a nonprofit organization based in Seattle, thinks so.

Since 2007, Startup Weekend has been orchestrating gatherings of entrepreneurs, application developers, marketers and designers who, over 54 hours in 3 days, pitch their business ideas, self-select, break into teams, and then work to build what they hope will become successful technology start-ups. Each Startup

Weekend culminates with a business competition, where participants and invited panelists vote for the best overall start-up to receive a prize. So far, according to Marc Nager and Clint Nelsen, the organization’s directors, Startup Weekend has held 83 events in 62 cities, and those events have begin 290 ventures.

Several companies hatched at these events are now operational, a few with full-time employees, including: Mugasha, an electronic dance music site based in Portland; Skribit, an Atlanta-based tool that helps bloggers gather story suggestions from their readers; Foodspotting, an online food guide based in San Francisco that emphasizes local dishes and user-contributed photographs; and SnapImpact, a Boulder, Colo.,-based site and iPhone app that matches volunteers to charities and projects.

But Startup Weekend has never held an event in a developing nation, let alone an area recovering from a natural disaster. Attempts to organize a Startup Weekend in Nigeria in 2008 failed because the group  lacked a network in the country to help secure a venue, promote the event, and recruit participants.

Nonetheless, Mr. Nager and Mr. Nelsen intend to hold Startup Weekend: Haiti in the fall, following the rainy season. To do so, they will have to raise sponsorship funds here and forge partnerships there with experts and organizations including schools and government offices. They face a steep challenge and need to learn a great deal about economic development, said Andrew Hyde, founder of Startup Weekend, “but sometimes big challenges are best met by people unfamiliar with the obstacles.”

So far, Mr. Nager and Mr. Nelsen have obtained one corporate sponsor, Microsoft BizSpark, a division of the software giant that offers free software and support to start-ups. BizSpark donated a venue for a fundraiser at the SXSW conference in Austin next month. Mr. Nelsen hopes the event will lock in at least $8,000 in donations and maybe more.

Startup Weekend will also seek donations online, using the services of San Francisco-based Piryx, a fund-raising platform that has worked extensively with politicians and nonprofit groups. In fact, it was Tom Serres, chief executive of Piryx, who suggested holding a Startup Weekend in Haiti.

Acknowledging their own lack of experience, Mr. Nager and Mr. Nelsen say they don’t know who will show up for the event in Haiti. They hope to recruit a mix of aid workers and residents with business ideas. “Whether people have ideas for farmers markets and Internet cafes, or high-tech, medical and logistics businesses, we want to help them get started and let them know we can continue to support them financially and with advice,” said Shaherose Charania, who is chief executive of Women 2.0 (another entrepreneurial support venture) and who has volunteered to serve as a coach.

Everyone is hopeful, but not everyone is convinced. “They might succeed if they do their research,” said Melissa Carrier, executive director at the center for social value creation with the University of Maryland. “But there is a strong risk that Haiti may not be ready to absorb this kind of economic development by the fall. Basic needs of the citizens may still be so under-met that there won’t be capacity to even think about business creation and jobs.”

Startup Weekend promises to spend 90 percent or more of the total budget raised for this initiative within Haiti’s borders and to post its budget on its Web site. “Beyond that, I don’t want to make other promises,”

Mr. Nager said. If the event inspires the creation of one company or one job even, he said, he would consider it a success.

See The Prize’s guide to coming business plan competitions. And here’s how to win a competition.

Friday, February 19, 2010

The U.S. in Haiti: Neoliberalism at the Barrel of a Gun

Go to Original (The Indypendent) >

By Arun Gupta
From the February 19, 2010 issue | Posted in Arun Gupta

Official denials aside, the United States has embarked on a new military occupation of Haiti thinly cloaked as disaster relief. While both the Pentagon and the United Nations claimed more troops were needed to provide “security and stability” to bring in aid, violence was never an issue, according to nearly all independent observers in the field.

The military response appears to be more opportunistic. With Haiti’s government “all but invisible” and its repressive police forces “devastated,” popular organizations were starting to fill the void. But the Western powers rushing in want to rebuild Haiti on a foundation of sweatshops, agro-exports and tourism. This is opposed by the popular organizations, which draw from Haiti’s overwhelmingly poor majority. Thus, if a neoliberal plan is going to be imposed it will be done at gunpoint.

The rapid mobilization of thousands of U.S. troops crowded out much of the aid being sent to the Port-au-Prince airport following the Jan. 12 earthquake. Doctors Without Borders said five of its cargo flights were turned away, while flights from the World Food Program were delayed up to two days. By the end of January, three quarters of Haitians still lacked clean water, the government had received only 2 percent of the tents it had requested and hospitals in the capital reported they were running “dangerously low” on basic medical supplies like antibiotics and painkillers. Nearly a month into the crisis, the Washington Post reported, “Every day, tens of thousands of Haitians face a grueling quest to find food, any food. A nutritious diet is out of the question.”

At the same time, the United States had assumed control of Haiti’s airspace, landed 6,500 soldiers on the ground with 15,000 more troops off shore at one point and dispatched an armada of naval vessels and nine coast guard cutters to patrol the waters, and the U.S. Embassy was issuing orders on behalf of the Haitian government. In a telling account, The New York Times described a press conference in Haiti at which “the American ambassador and the American general in charge of the United States troops deployed here” were “seated at center stage,” while Haitian President René Préval stood in the back “half-listening” and eventually “wandered away without a word.”

The real powers in Haiti now are the U.S. commander, Lt. Gen. Ken Keen; U.S. ambassador Louis Lucke; Bill Clinton (who has been tapped by U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to lead recovery efforts); and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. When asked at the press conference how long U.S. forces were planning to stay, Keen said, “I’m not going to put a time frame on it,” while Lucke added, “We’re not really planning in terms of weeks or months or years. We’re planning basically to see this job through to the end.”

While much of the corporate media fixated on “looters,” virtually every independent observer in Haiti after the earthquake noted the lack of violence. Even Lt. Gen. Keen described the security situation as “relatively calm.” Veteran Haiti reporter Kim Ives told Democracy Now! on January 20: “Security is not the issue. We see throughout Haiti the population … organizing themselves into popular committees to clean up, to pull out the bodies from the rubble, to build refugee camps, to set up their security for the refugee camps.” In one instance, Ives continued, a truckload of food showed up in a neighborhood in the middle of the night unannounced. “It could have been a melee. The local popular organization … was contacted. They immediately mobilized their members. They came out. They set up a perimeter. They set up a cordon. They lined up about 600 people who were staying on the soccer field behind the house, which is also a hospital, and they distributed the food in an orderly, equitable fashion. … They didn’t need Marines. They didn’t need the U.N.”

A NEW INVASION

But that’s what Haiti is getting, including 3,500 more soldiers and police for the 9,200-strong U.N. force already there. These U.N. forces have played a leading role in repressing Haiti’s poor, who twice propelled Jean-Bertrand Aristide to the presidency on a platform of social and economic justice. And the poor know that the detailed U.S. and U.N. plans in the works for “recovery” — sweatshops, land grabs and privatization — are part of the same system of economic slavery they’ve been fighting against for more than 200 years. Neoliberal reconstruction, then, will happen at the barrel of the gun. In this light, the impetus of a new occupation may be to reconstitute the Haitian Army (or similar entity) as a force “to fight the people.”

This is the crux of the situation. Despite all the terror inflicted on Haiti by the United States, particularly the slaughter of thousands by U.S.-armed death squads after each coup, the strongest social and political force in Haiti today is probably the organisations populaires (OPs) that are the backbone of Aristide’s party, Fanmi Lavalas. Twice last year, after legislative elections that banned Fanmi Lavalas were scheduled, boycotts were organized by the party. In the April and June polls the abstention rate was reported to be at least 89 percent.

A new occupation of Haiti — the third in the last 16 years — also fits within the U.S. doctrine of rollback in Latin America: support for the coup in Honduras, seven new military bases in Colombia, hostility toward Bolivia and Venezuela. Related to that, the United States wants to ensure that Haiti will not pose the “threat of a good example” by pursuing an independent path, as it tried to do under President Jean-Bertrand Aristide — which is why he was toppled twice, in 1991 and 2004, in U.S.-backed coups.

SWEATSHOP SOLUTION

In a March 2009 New York Times op-ed, U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon outlined his development plan for Haiti, involving lower port fees, “dramatically expanding the country’s export zones,” and emphasizing “the garment industry and agriculture.” Ban’s neoliberal plan was drawn up by Oxford University economist Paul Collier.

Collier is blunt, writing, “Due to its poverty and relatively unregulated labor market, Haiti has labor costs that are fully competitive with China.” He calls for agricultural exports such as mangoes that involve pushing farmers off the land so they can be employed in garment manufacturing in export-processing zones. To facilitate these zones Collier says, Haiti and donors need to provide them with private ports and electricity, “clear and rapid rights to land;” outsourced customs; “roads, water and sewage;” and the involvement of the Clinton Global Initiative to bring in garment manufacturers.

Revealing the connection between neoliberalism and military occupation in Haiti, Collier credits the Brazilian-led United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH ) with establishing “credible security,” but laments that its remaining mandate is “too short for investor confidence.” In fact, MINUSTAH has been involved in numerous massacres in Port-au-Prince slums that are strongholds for Lavalas. Collier also notes MINUSTAH will cost some $5 billion overall; compare that to the $379 million the U.S. government has designated for post-earthquake relief.

Speaking at an October 2009 investors’ conference in Port-au-Prince that attracted dogooders like Gap, Levi Strauss and Citibank, Bill Clinton claimed a revitalized garment industry could create 100,000 jobs. Some 200 companies, half of them garment manufacturers, attended the conference, drawn by “Haiti’s extremely low labor costs, comparable to those in Bangladesh,” The New York Times reported. Those costs are often less than the official daily minimum wage of $1.75. (The Haitian Parliament approved an increase last May 4 to about $5 an hour, but it was opposed by the business elite, and President René Préval refused to sign the bill, effectively killing it. This episode sparked student protests starting in June of last year, which were repressed by Haitian police and MINUSTAH .)

ROOTS OF REPRESSION

In his work Haiti State Against Nation: The Origins and Legacy of Duvalierism, Michel-Rolph Trouillot writes, “Haiti’s first army saw itself as the offspring of the struggle against slavery and colonialism.” That changed during the U.S. occupation of Haiti from 1915 to 1934. Under the tutelage of the U.S. Marines, “the Haitian Garde was specifically created to fight against other Haitians. It received its baptism of fire in combat against its countrymen.” This brutal legacy led Aristide to disband the army in 1995.

Yet prior to the army’s disbandment, in the wake of the U.S. invasion that returned a politically handcuffed Aristide to the presidency in 1994, “CIA agents accompanying U.S. troops began a new recruitment drive” that included leaders of the death squad known as FRAPH, according to Peter Hallward, author of Damning the Flood: Haiti, Aristide and the Politics of Containment.

It’s worth recalling how the Clinton administration played a double game under the cover of humanitarian intervention. Investigative reporter Allan Nairn revealed that in 1993 “five to ten thousand” small arms were shipped from Florida, past the U.S. naval blockade, to the coup leaders. These weapons enabled FRAPH to grow and to terrorize the popular movements. Then, pointing to intensifying FRAPH violence in 1994, the Clinton administration pressured Aristide into acquiescing to a U.S. invasion because FRAPH was becoming “the only game in town.”

After 20,000 U.S. troops landed in Haiti, they set about protecting FRAPH members, freeing them from jail and refusing to disarm them or seize their weapons caches. FRAPH leader Emmanual Constant told Nairn that after the invasion the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) was using FRAPH to counter “subversive activities.” Meanwhile, the State Department and CIA went about stacking the Haitian National Police with former army soldiers, many of whom were on the U.S. payroll. By 1996, according to one report, Haitian Army and “FRAPH forces remain armed and present in virtually every community across the country,” and paramilitaries were “inciting street violence in an effort to undermine social order.”

During the early 1990s, a separate group of Haitian soldiers, including Guy Philippe, who led the 2004 coup against Aristide, were spirited away to Ecuador where they allegedly trained at a “U.S. military facility.” Hallward describes the second coup as beginning in 2001 as a “Contra war” in the Dominican Republic with Philippe and former FRAPH commander Jodel Chamblain as leaders. A Democracy Now! report from April 7, 2004, claimed that the U.S. government-funded International Republican Institute provided arms and technical training to the anti-Aristide force in the Dominican Republic, while “200 members of the special forces of the United States were there in the area training these so-called rebels.”

A key component of the campaign against Aristide after he was inaugurated in 2001 was economic destabilization that cut off funding for “road construction, AIDS programs, water works and health care.” Likely factors in the 2004 coup included Aristide’s public campaign demanding that France repay the money it extorted from Haiti in 1825 for the former slave colony to buy its freedom, estimated in 2003 at $21 billion, and his working with Venezuela, Bolivia and Cuba to create alternatives to U.S. economic domination of the region.

When Aristide was finally ousted in February 2004, another round of slaughter ensued, with 800 bodies dumped in just one week in March. A 2006 study by the British medical journal Lancet determined that 8,000 people were murdered in the capital region during the first 22 months of the U.S.-backed coup government and 35,000 women and girls were raped or sexually assaulted. The OPs and Lavalas militants were decimated, in part by a U.N. war against the main Lavalas strongholds in Port-au-Prince’s neighborhoods of Bel Air and Cité Soleil, the latter a densely packed slum of some 300,000. (Hallward claims U.S. Marines were involved in a number of massacres in areas such as Bel Air in 2004.)

‘MORE FREE TRADE’

Less than four months after the 2004 coup, reporter Jane Regan described a draft economic plan, the “Interim Cooperation Framework,” which “calls for more free trade zones (FTZs), stresses tourism and export agriculture and hints at the eventual privatization of the country’s state enterprises.” Regan wrote that the plan was “drawn up by people nobody elected,” mainly “foreign technicians” and “institutions like the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and the World Bank.”

Much of this plan was implemented under Préval, who announced in 2007 plans to privatize the public telephone company, Téléco. This plan is now being promoted by Bill Clinton and Ban Ki-moon as Haiti’s path out of poverty. The Wall Street Journal touted such achievements as “10,000 new garment industry jobs” in 2009, a “luxury hotel complex” in the upper-crust neighborhood of Pétionville and a $55 million investment by Royal Caribbean International at its “private Haitian beach paradise.”

Haiti, of course, has been here before, when the USAID spoke of turning it into the “Taiwan of the Caribbean.” In the 1980s, under Jean- Claude “Baby Doc” Duvalier, it shifted onethird of cultivated land to export crops while “there were some 240 multinational corporations, employing between 40,000 and 60,000 predominantly female workers,” sewing garments, baseballs for Major League Baseball, and Disney merchandise, according to scholar Yasmine Shamsie. Those jobs, paying as little as 11 cents an hour, coincided with a decline in per capita income and living standards. (Ban Ki-moon wants Haiti to emulate Bangladesh, where sweatshops pay as little as 6 cents an hour.) At such low pay, workers had little left after purchasing food and transportation to and from the factories. These self-contained export-processing zones, often funded by USAID and the World Bank, also add little to the national economy, importing tax free virtually all the materials used.

U.S.-promoted agricultural policies, such as forcing Haitian rice farmers to compete against U.S.-subsidized agribusiness, cost an estimated 830,000 rural jobs according to Oxfam, while exacerbating malnutrition. This and the decimation of the invaluable Creole pig (because of fears of an outbreak of African swine fever), led to displacement of the peasantry into urban areas, and along with the promise of urban jobs, fueled rural migration into flimsy shantytowns. It’s hard not to conclude that these development schemes played a major role in the horrific death toll in Port-au-Prince.

The latest scheme, on hold for now, is a $50 million “industrial park that would house roughly 40 manufacturing facilities and warehouses,” bankrolled by the Soros Economic Development Fund (yes, that Soros). The planned location is Cité Soleil. James Dobbins, former special envoy to Haiti under President Bill Clinton, outlined other measures in a New York Times op-ed: “This disaster is an opportunity to accelerate oft-delayed reforms” including “breaking up or at least reorganizing the government- controlled telephone monopoly. The same goes with the Education Ministry, the electric company, the Health Ministry and the courts.”

It’s clear that the Shock Doctrine is alive and well in Haiti. But given the strength of the organisations populaires and weakness of the government, it will have to be imposed violently.

For those who wonder why the United States is so obsessed with controlling a country so impoverished, devastated, and seemingly inconsequential as Haiti, Noam Chomsky sums it up best: “Why was the U.S. so intent on destroying northern Laos, so poor that peasants hardly even knew they were in Laos? Or Indochina? Or Guatemala? Or Maurice Bishop in Grenada, the nutmeg capital of the world? The reasons are about the same, and are explained in the internal record. These are ‘viruses’ that might ‘infect others’ with the dangerous idea of pursuing similar paths to independent development. The smaller and weaker they are, the more dangerous they tend to be. If they can do it, why can’t we? Does the Godfather allow a small storekeeper to get away with not paying protection money?”

Haiti Earthquake: Bill Clinton Launches the UN's Largest-Ever Natural Disaster Appeal

Go to Original (UN Dispatch) >

Mark Leon Goldberg - February 18, 2010 - 4:49 pm

At the UN moments ago, UN Special Envoy for Haiti Bill Clinton launched the a $1,441,547,920 humanitarian appeal for Haiti.  This is the UN's organization's largest ever appeal for humanitarian assistance following a natural disaster.

At a meeting at the UN, Clinton delivered an impassioned appeal for international support for Haiti relief.  He said the appeal was important for long term rebuilding, but the most immediate concern was to meet Haitians' basic needs.  "You can't build a country back when a third of the people are living day-to-day...when people are worried about things like their children dying of dysentery in a camp," said Clinton.  "We need to move them from living day-to-day to living month to month."  He repeated that refrain a number of times, at one point banging the table for emphasis.

His job now is to help convince donors that their donations will be used effectively.  To that end, he announced the launch of a website, Haitispecialenvoy.org, that will allow donors to track their funds.  He also expressed his confidence in the Haitian government, which is an important thing considering that much of the funding will be used to support Haiti's crippled governing infrastructure.  Clinton even cited a conversation he had with Haiti President Rene Preval in which Preval refused to lament the loss of his presidential palace, saying "everything from this day forward should be about the country we wish to become, not the country we used to be."

The report (pdf) that has accompanied the appeal contains some new facts and figures that give some perspective to the immense scale of the disaster.  According to the  document, 217,366 people are were killed in the earthquake and over 300,000 wounded.  The amount of displacement is also staggering.  Nearly 2 million people are living in "spontaneous settlements," both in Port au Prince and in the rural environs.  The $1.44 billion appeal is intended to provide relief to the affected population and set the stage for Haiti's long term recovery.

The full explanation and justification for that figure can be found in the 130 page report.  Two things to keep in mind, though. First, about one-third of the appeal, or  $480 million, is for food aid.

Before the earthquake Haiti was dependent on food aid. Now, even more so. (Again, this gets to Clinton's point about the need for moving people beyond living day-to-day).  Second, this appeal will fold in the emergency $577 million "flash appeal" that was launched in the week following the earthquake.  That appeal exceeded its overall funding mark earlier this week, meaning that the international community and donors now need to come up with an additional $760 million or so to meet Haiti's needs in areas ranging from food aid, to shelter, schooling, sanitation, etc for the next year.

This is an unprecedented undertaking. Fortunately, it is also unprecedented for someone as high profile as Bill Clinton to be leading the charge.  As I've said before, one thing that Haiti has going for it is that Bill Clinton is in their corner. And if there is something in which President Clinton truly excels, it is fundraising.  I must say, having just watched Bill Clinton brief the UN on the appeal, it is clear that despite his recent health scare, he is eager to put these talents to use on behalf of the Haitian people.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Cuba's aid ignored by the media?

Go to Original (Al Jazeera English) > 
By Tom Fawthrop in Havana 

After the quake struck, Haiti's first medical aid came from Cuba

Among the many donor nations helping Haiti, Cuba and its medical teams have played a major role in treating earthquake victims.

Public health experts say the Cubans were the first to set up medical facilities among the debris and to revamp hospitals immediately after the earthquake struck.

However, their pivotal work in the health sector has received scant media coverage.

"It is striking that there has been virtually no mention in the media of the fact that Cuba had several hundred health personnel on the ground before any other country," said David Sanders, a professor of public health from Western Cape University in South Africa.

The Cuban team coordinator in Haiti, Dr Carlos Alberto Garcia, says the Cuban doctors, nurses and other health personnel have been working non-stop, day and night, with operating rooms open 18 hours a day.

During a visit to La Paz hospital in the Haitian capital Port-au-Prince, Dr Mirta Roses, the director of the Pan American Health Organisation (PAHO) which is in charge of medical coordination between the Cuban doctors, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and a host of health sector NGOs, described the aid provided by Cuban doctors as "excellent and marvellous".

La Paz is one of five hospitals in Haiti that is largely staffed by health professionals from Havana. 

History of cooperation

Haiti and Cuba signed a medical cooperation agreement in 1998.

Before the earthquake struck, 344 Cuban health professionals were already present in Haiti, providing primary care and obstetrical services as well as operating to restore the sight of Haitians blinded by eye diseases.

More doctors were flown in shortly after the earthquake, as part of the rapid response Henry Reeve Medical Brigade of disaster specialists. The brigade has extensive experience in dealing with the aftermath of earthquakes, having responded to such disasters in China, Indonesia and Pakistan.

"In the case of Cuban doctors, they are rapid responders to disasters, because disaster management is an integral part of their training," explains Maria a Hamlin Zúniga, a public health specialist from Nicaragua.

"They are fully aware of the need to reduce risks by having people prepared to act in any disaster situation."

Cuban doctors have been organising medical facilities in three revamped and five field hospitals, five diagnostic centres, with a total of 22 different care posts aided by financial support from Venezuela.

They are also operating nine rehabilitation centres staffed by nearly 70 Cuban physical therapists and rehab specialists, in addition to the Haitian medical personnel.

The Cuban team has been assisted by 100 specialists from Venezuela, Chile, Spain, Mexico, Colombia and Canada and 17 nuns.

Havana has also sent 400,000 tetanus vaccines for the wounded.

Eduardo Nuñez Valdes, a Cuban epidemiologist who is currently in Port-au-Prince, has stressed that the current unsanitary conditions could lead to an epidemic of parasitic and infectious diseases if not acted upon quickly. 

Media silence

However, in reporting on the international aid effort, Western media have generally not ranked Cuba high on the list of donor nations.

One major international news agency's list of donor nations credited Cuba with sending over 30 doctors to Haiti, whereas the real figure stands at more than 350, including 280 young Haitian doctors who graduated from Cuba. The final figure accounts for a combined total of 930 health professionals in all Cuban medical teams making it the largest medical contingent on the ground.

Another batch if 200 Cuban-trained doctors from 24 countries in Africa and Latin American, and a dozen American doctors who graduated from Havana are currently en route to Haiti and will provide reinforcement to existing Cuban medical teams.

By comparison the internationally-renowned Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF or Doctors without Borders) has approximately 269 health professionals working in Haiti. MSF is much better funded and has far more extensive medical supplies than the Cuban team. 

Left out

But while representatives from MSF and the ICRC are frequently in front of television cameras discussing health priorities and medical needs, the Cuban medical teams are missing in the media coverage.

Richard Gott, the Guardian newspaper's former foreign editor and a Latin America specialist, explains: "Western media are programmed to be indifferent to aid that comes from unexpected places. In the Haitian case, the media have ignored not just the Cuban contribution, but also the efforts made by other Latin American countries." 

Brazil is providing $70mn in funding for 10 urgent care units, 50 mobile units for emergency care, a laboratory and a hospital, among other health services.

Venezuela has cancelled all Haiti debt and has promised to supply oil free of charge until the country has recovered from the disaster.

Western NGOs employ media officers to ensure that the world knows what they are doing.

According to Gott, the Western media has grown accustomed to dealing with such NGOs, enabling a relationship of mutual assistance to develop.

Cuban medical teams, however, are outside this predominantly Western humanitarian-media loop and are therefore only likely to receive attention from Latin American media and Spanish language broadcasters and print media.

There have, however, been notable exceptions to this reporting syndrome. On January 19, a CNN reporter broke the silence on the Cuban role in Haiti with a report on Cuban doctors at La Paz hospital. 

Cuba/US cooperation

When the US requested that their military planes be allowed to fly through Cuban airspace for the purpose of evacuating Haitians to hospitals in Florida, Cuba immediately agreed despite almost 50 years of animosity between the two countries.

Josefina Vidal, the director of the Cuban foreign ministry's North America department, issued a statement declaring that: "Cuba is ready to cooperate with all the nations on the ground, including the US, to help the Haitian people and save more lives."

This deal cut the flight time of medical evacuation flights from the US naval base at Guantanamo Bay on Cuba's southern tip to Miami by 90 minutes.

According to Darby Holladay, the US state department's spokesperson, the US has also communicated its readiness to make medical relief supplies available to Cuban doctors in Haiti.

"Potential US-Cuban cooperation could go a long way toward meeting Haiti's needs," says Dr Julie Feinsilver, the author of Healing the Masses - a book about Cuban health diplomacy, who argues that maximum cooperation is urgently needed.

Rich in human resources
 
Although Cuba is a poor developing country, their wealth of human resources - doctors, engineers and disaster management experts - has enabled this small Caribbean nation to play a global role in health care and humanitarian aid alongside the far richer nations of the west.

Cuban medical teams played a key role in the wake of the Indian Ocean Tsunami and provided the largest contingent of doctors after the 2005 Pakistan earthquake.

They also stayed the longest among international medical teams treating the victims of the 2006 Indonesian earthquake.

In the Pakistan relief operation the US and Europe dispatched medical teams. Each had a base camp with most doctors deployed for a month.

The Cubans, however, deployed seven major base camps, operated 32 field hospitals and stayed for six months.

Bruno Rodriguez, who is now Cuba's foreign minister, headed the mission - living in the mountains of Pakistan for more than six months.

Just after the Indonesian earthquake a year later, I met with Indonesia's then regional health co-coordinator, Dr Ronny Rockito.

Cuba had sent 135 health workers and two field hospitals. Rockito said that while the medical teams from other countries departed after just one month, he asked the Cuban medical team to extend their stay.

"I appreciate the Cuban medical team. Their style is very friendly."

Their medical standard is very high," he told me.

"The Cuban [field] hospitals are fully complete and it's free, with no financial support from our government."

Rockito says he never expected to see Cuban doctors coming to his country's rescue."We felt very surprised about doctors coming from a poor country, a country so far away that we know little about.

"We can learn from the Cuban health system. They are very fast to handle injuries and fractures. They x-ray, then they operate straight away." 

A 'new dawn'?

The Montreal summit, the first gathering of 20 donor nations, agreed to hold a major conference on Haiti's future at the United Nations in March.

Some analysts see Haiti's rehabilitation as a potential opportunity for the US and Cuba to bypass their ideological differences and combine their resources - the US has the logistics while Cuba has the human resources - to help Haiti.

Feinsilver is convinced that "Cuba should be given a seat at the table with all other nations and multilateral organisations and agencies in any and all meetings to discuss, plan and coordinate aid efforts for Haiti's reconstruction".

"This would be in recognition of Cuba's long-standing policy and practise of medical diplomacy, as well as its general development aid to Haiti," she says.

But, will Haiti offer the US administration, which has Cuba on its list of nations that allegedly "support terrorism", a "new dawn" in its relations with Cuba?

In late January, Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, thanked Cuba for its efforts in Haiti and welcomed further assistance and co-operation.

In Haiti's grand reconstruction plan, Feinsilver argues, "there can be no imposition of systems from any country, agency or institution.

The Haitian people themselves, through what remains of their government and NGOs, must provide the policy direction, and Cuba has been and should continue to be a key player in the health sector in Haiti".