With a “refugee” camp holding over 800 Haitians in inhuman conditions,
Conectas charges Brazil is covering up an international crisis
by Conectas Human Rights (for Haiti Liberte)
The Brazilian government has for
months now been playing a word game – between “immigration” and “refugee” – to
minimize the severity of the humanitarian crisis unfolding in the small town of
Brasiléia, in Brazil’s northern state of Acre on the border with Bolivia, some
240 kilometers southwest of the state capital Rio Branco.
More
than 830 immigrants – nearly all of them Haitians – are living inside a
warehouse built for just 200 people, in extremely unhygienic conditions. They
are required to share just 10 lavatories and 8 showers, where there is no soap
and no toothpaste, sewage leaks outside in the open air, and people have been
packed for months inside an area of 200 square meters under a metal roof, with
black plastic sheeting for curtains, in temperatures that can reach 104 degrees
Fahrenheit (40 degrees Celsius). The local hospital reports that 90% of the
patients from the camp have diarrhea. The shelter is already operating at four
times capacity, and 40 new Haitians arrive every day.