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Haiti Still Suffering Six Months on From Earthquake
Six months after an earthquake devastated Haiti's capital and killed up to 300,000 people, Port-au-Prince is still a city of rubble, tented squalor and desperate need, charities have said.
Magnus MacFarlane-Barrow, founder of the British aid charity Mary's Meals, has given the verdict after returning to the shattered Caribbean country.
On his first return trip since he went into Port-au-Prince just a few days after the quake in January, Mr MacFarlane-Barrow said he saw little evidence of the billions in aid that was pledged by a world stunned by the scale of the catastrophe.
"My overriding feeling has been one of great disappointment. I can't see that anything has changed for people since the earthquake," he said yesterday.
Before the earthquake, his charity, which has been a beneficiary of The Daily Telegraph Christmas Appeal, was feeding thousands of Haitian children, particularly in Cité Soleil, the shanty town on the edge of Port-au-Prince which has long been regarded as one of the world's worst slums.
"Driving about in the centre of Port-au-Prince, very little appears to have changed from six months ago," he said. "Most of the buildings are exactly as they were immediately after the earthquake, even the iconic buildings like the presidential palace and the cathedral are just standing there as they were." He said he was particularly struck not to see any "big earth moving equipment", adding: "I expected there would be lots of that. Any work that is being done is people working through the rubble by hand." Others report that, in stark contrast to the weeks after the earthquake when the major charities poured into Port-au-Prince, their vehicles are far thinner on the ground now.
To a degree, Haitians are getting on with their daily lives. The markets are open as are many of the schools. However, an estimated 1.2 million are still camping out in tents and tarpaulins, many without basic sanitation. Chaos over property ownership has complicated rebuilding efforts while the onset of what is expected to be a particularly wet storm season has prompted the United Nations to warn that a serious hurricane could be "devastating" to Haiti.
"The tents are everywhere - on the central reservation of the highways, on the pavements, and in places where houses used to be," said Mr MacFarlane-Barrow. "In the past couple of days it has been raining so there are streams running between the tents." A new report by the British Red Cross has warned that aid agencies providing water and sanitation are stretched to capacity and cannot keep going indefinitely.
The charity blamed the snail's pace reconstruction on a combination of government "dysfunction" and the scale of the disaster. It has not helped that only two per cent of the pounds 3.5 billion promised in short-term international aid has reportedly got to Haiti.
Certainly, the nightmare scenario - mass starvation and large-scale outbreaks of diarrhoea or cholera in the camps - has not happened. Jean-Max Bellerive, Haiti's prime minister, feels justified in saying that the "total chaos" immediately after the quake is now "organised chaos".
Ordinary Haitians are "surprisingly upbeat", said Mr MacFarlane-Barrow, although he acknowledged they are "incredibly resilient people they're not sitting around worrying about hurricanes coming".
He said he had been struck by the progress made by ordinary people in Cité Soleil to rebuild their lives. "Yesterday, I saw them rebuilding local schools, the men filling cement mixers, queues of women walking in with buckets of water to pour in." he said.
Cité Soleil has been the focus of security concerns after many of the country's most dangerous criminals were feared to have fled there after the earthquake destroyed the main prison.
But Mr MacFarlane-Barrow said he was cheered to see that the children had come back to the slum's schools where Mary's Meals had also been able to feed many of the elderly without disruption from criminal elements.
The main priority, he believes, must be proper clear-up operations and rebuilding, preferably involving local people themselves to create employment.
Many Haitians do not have running water, electricity or adequate food - but, then, they didn't before the earthquake. "With the best will in the world those problems can't be solved overnight," said Mr MacFarlane-Barrow. "But I remain optimistic - I just hope for the people's sake it happens sooner rather than later."

9 Comments so far
Show AllThe UN IS the US.
Of course they are, they have two racist, each one
representing respective racist parties, in charge of
the rebuilding, what did eveyone expect ????????????????
I still expect some kind of un-velvety revolution one would expect.
I just checked out a video showing Haiti 6 months after the earthquake to see it for myself. Our government not only abandons its own citizens but those in need elsewhere. The only ones that seem to get consistently get assistance are corporations, the military machine and certain countries receiving foreign "aid".
http://www.haitinews.net/
But, mostly and above all, 'our only ally' in the Middle East.
G8, G20, Gee IMF..........GEEzus!
Geee,
What happened to the one-hundred million dollars Hati fund raised by George Bush and Bill Clinton?
I guess it just kinda disappeared with the TARP bank bailout funds, huh?
And kind of disappeared like the "Reconstruction" funds given to Haliburton to rebuild Bagdad...?
And disappeared like the Billions in World Bank Loans given under the Bush Administration to
"rebuild" Lebanon? Guess who won that no-bid contract?
GWB's old financial partners: The Bin Laden Group (which used to be the Bin Laden Brothers Contracting for Industry). Quite an unholy alliance if you ask me. First the Bin Ladens supposedly knocked down our buildings in NYC , and in exchange, we knock down Lebanon and let the Bin Ladens rebuild it. Big profits all around. A real Win-Win.
If we had a free press, you might expect a reporter somewhere to cover those unseemly relationships between the two crime families and the Carlyle Group, wouldn't you?
How long before we're all living in the rubble, pitching up make-shift tents?
The above is all just my opinion only and I could be wrong.
TJ
Elementary, my dear Watson, elementary.
Haiti was thrown into misery, poverty and despair by the West - mostly the US. The earthquake was only a reminder to the predators that Haiti was still there and worth a second look just in case there was a drop of blood left to extract. So, they all came (the US with its military force, of course), they saw that there was nothing worth "liberating" or "saving" and they took their mercenaries, their drones, their drugs and their bottles of water and went elsewhere forgetting about the misery, poverty and dispair they were leaving behind, once again. There's always a new place in the world that needs checking out and the US military is always on stand-by for such occassions. Just in case...