by Bill Quigley and Amber Ramanauskas (Haiti Liberte)
Despite billions in aid which were supposed to go to the Haitian people, hundreds of thousands are still homeless, living in shanty tent camps as the effects from the Jan. 12, 2010 earthquake remain.
According to Oxfam International, the earthquake killed 250,000 people and injured another 300,000. Some 360,000 Haitians are still displaced and living hand to mouth in 496 tent camps across the country according to the International Organization of Migration. Most eat only one meal a day.
Cholera followed the earthquake. Now widely blamed on poor sanitation by UN troops, it has claimed 7,750 lives and sickened over a half a million. The Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti and their Haitian partner Bureau des Avocats Internationaux have filed legal claims against the UN on behalf of thousands of cholera victims. Recently the Haitian government likewise demanded over $2 billion from the international community to address the scourge of cholera.
Haiti was already the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere with 55% of its population living below the poverty line of $1.25 a day. About 60% of the population is engaged in agriculture, the primary source of income in rural areas. Haiti imports more than 55% of its food. The average Haitian eats only 73% of the daily minimum recommended by the World Health Organization. Even before the earthquake, 40% of households (3.8 million people) were undernourished, and three out of 10 children suffered from chronic malnutrition.
In November 2012, Hurricane Sandy leveled yet another severe blow to the hemisphere’s poorest country. Wind and 20 inches of rain from Hurricane Sandy killed over 50 people, damaged dozens of cholera centers, and badly hurt already struggling farming communities.
Despite an outpouring of global compassion, some estimate as high as $3 billion in individual donations and another $6 billion in governmental assistance, too little has changed. Part of the problem is that the international community and non-government organizations (Haiti has sometimes been called the Republic of NGOs) have bypassed Haitian non-governmental agencies and the Haitian government itself. The Center for Global Development’s analysis of where the money went concluded that overall less than 10% went to the Haitian government and less than 1% went to Haitian organizations and businesses. A full one-third of the humanitarian funding for Haiti was actually returned to donor countries to reimburse them for their own civil and military work in the country, and the majority of the rest went to international NGOs and private contractors.
With hundreds of thousands of people still displaced, the international community has built less than 5000 new homes. Despite the fact that crime and murder are low in Haiti (Haiti had a murder rate of 6.9 of every hundred thousand, while New Orleans has a rate of 58), huge amounts of money are spent on a UN force which many Haitians do not want. The annual budget of the United Nations “peacekeeping” mission (MINUSTAH) for 2012-2013 is $644 million and would pay for the construction of more than 58,000 homes at $11,000 per home.
There are many stories of projects hatched by big names in the international community into which millions of donated dollars were poured only to be abandoned because the result was of no use to the Haitian people. For example, internationals created a model housing community in Zoranje. A $2 million project built 60 houses which now sit abandoned according to Haiti Grassroots Watch.
Deborah Sontag in the New York Times tells the stories of many other bungles in a critical article which reported only a very small percentage of the funds have been focused on creating permanent housing for the hundreds of thousands displaced. Many expect 200,000 will be still in displacement camps a year from now.
The majority of the hundreds of thousands of people still displaced by the earthquake have no other housing options. Those who were renters cannot find places to stay because there is a dramatic shortage of rental housing. Many of those who owned homes before the earthquake have been forced to move back into them despite the fact that these homes are unsafe. A survey by USAID found that housing options are so few that people have moved back into over 50,000 “red” buildings which engineers said should be demolished.
One program, 16/6 (moving six big camps back into 16 neighborhoods), promises to pay a one-time $500 maximum rental subsidy for a family to relocate from tent camps but this program will only benefit a tiny percentage of the displaced population because it is currently available only for about 5% of the people displaced. It is limited to those living in the six most visible public camps in Port au Prince. With the housing shortage in Port-au-Prince, there are few places available to rent even with a subsidy.
Most of the people living under tents are on private property and are subjected to official and private violence in forced evictions, according to Oxfam. Over 60,000 have been forcibly evicted from over 150 tent camps with little legal protection. Oxfam reports that many fear leaving their camps to seek work or food because they worry that their tents and belongings will be destroyed in their absence.
Dozens of Haitian human rights organizations and international allies are organizing against forced evictions in a campaign called Under Tents Haiti.
The fact that these problems remain despite billions in aid is mostly the result of the failure of the international community to connect with Haitian civil society and to work with the Haitian government. Certainly the Haitian government has demonstrated problems, but how can a nation be expected to grow unless it leads its own reconstruction? Likewise, Haitian civil society, its churches, its human rights, and community organizations can be real partners in rebuilding the country. But the international community has to take the time to work in a respectful relationship with Haiti. Otherwise, the disasters, like the earthquake and hurricanes, will keep hammering our sisters and brothers in Haiti, the people in our hemisphere who have already been victimized far too frequently.
Bill Quigley is a human rights lawyer and teaches at Loyola University New Orleans. Amber Ramanauskas is a lawyer and human rights researcher. Thanks to Sophia Mire and Vladimir Laguerre for their help. A copy of this article with full sources is available. Bill can be reached at quigley77@gmail.com, Amber at gintarerama@gmail.com.
Thousands of Haitians live in temporary plywood housing like these. Very little of the billions given Haiti has gone to create permanent housing for the hundreds of thousands displaced by the quake.
Photo by Victoria Hazou
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