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Let the Haitians In
Jean Montrevil was shackled, imprisoned, about to be sent to Haiti. It was Jan. 6, days before the earthquake that would devastate Haiti, the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere. Montrevil came to the U.S. with a green card in 1986 at the age of 17. Twenty years ago, still a teenager, he was convicted of possession of cocaine and sent to prison for 11 years. Upon release, he married a U.S. citizen; he has four U.S.-citizen children, owns a business, pays taxes and is a legal, permanent resident. He is a well-respected Haitian New York community activist. But because of his earlier conviction, he was on an immigration supervision program, requiring him to check in with an immigration official every two weeks. On Dec. 30, during his routine visit, he was immediately detained and told he would be deported to Haiti. A fellow detainee bound for Haiti had a fever. That man's illness halted the flight, and then the earthquake struck.
The devastating toll of the Jan. 12 earthquake in Haiti continues to mount. Most efforts to rescue people from the rubble have ended. More than 150,000 people have been buried, some in makeshift graves near the ruins of the homes where they died, but many in unmarked, mass graves at Titanyen, the site of massacres during previous dictatorships and coups. More than 1 million people are homeless out of Haiti's population of 9 million. The stench of decaying bodies is still pervasive in the capital city of Port-au-Prince as well as in outlying towns, which, two weeks out, have seen little outside help. It was painful to see the mass of aid stockpiled at the airport. The Haitians need it now. For example, I saw pallets with thousands of bottles of Aquafina water there. Hopeful when a truck arrived to load up, I asked where it was headed. "To the U.S. Embassy," I was told.
One of the principal sources of national income in Haiti is the flow of remittances from the Haitian diaspora, whose cash, wired to family members back in Haiti, amounts to one-third of Haiti's gross national product. For years, after four major hurricanes and massive flooding, the Haitian community has simply been asking to be treated like Nicaraguans, Hondurans and Salvadorans in similar circumstances, to receive Temporary Protected Status (TPS). TPS allows people to stay in the U.S., and legally work, during times of armed conflict or natural disaster, and is a critical element of any humane policy. Finally, following frantic grass-roots lobbying after the earthquake, the U.S. government extended TPS to Haitians.
But TPS is not enough. Haitians need to be allowed into the United States, legally, compassionately and immediately. I visited hospitals and clinics in Port-au-Prince, with thousands of people waiting for care, and amputations happening with ibuprofen or Motrin, if patients were lucky. Ira Kurzban, a Miami-based attorney who represented Haiti for years, says the U.S. must let in those immediately who need medical care, that far too few of the injured have been brought to the U.S. In addition, he told me, the U.S. should bring many more people from Haiti, including all those people who had approved petitions by family members. It's about 70,000 people. These people have been approved, but are essentially in a multiyear waiting line to move to the U.S. Kurzban compared the historical willingness and ability of the U.S. to accept Cuban refugees with what he calls a policy of "containment" with Haiti, preventing people from leaving and blocking the shores with the Coast Guard. The first thing I saw when flying in to Port-au-Prince days after the earthquake were the Coast Guard cutters. They weren't bringing aid in, or carrying people out. They were preventing Haitians from leaving.
National Nurses United, the largest nurses union in the U.S., has 12,000 registered nurses willing to travel to Haiti to help, but they say they can't get assistance from the Obama administration. So they called filmmaker Michael Moore. He told me this week: "This is pretty pathetic if you're having to call me. I mean, you are the largest nurses union ... and you can't get a call in to the White House?" The NNU is seeking individual sponsors through its Web site.
Grass-roots and church groups in New York City demanded freedom for Jean Montrevil, and he was released. It is that kind of solidarity that is now needed by millions of Haitians, here and in Haiti, suffering the greatest catastrophe in their history.
Denis Moynihan contributed research to this column.- Posted in


12 Comments so far
Show All"National Nurses United, the largest nurses union in the U.S., has 12,000 registered nurses willing to travel to Haiti to help, but they say they can't get assistance from the Obama administration. So they called filmmaker Michael Moore."
They called Michael Moore? Wouldn't Spiderman or The Hulk have been even more effective?
Whatever you do, don't call the real powers that be. Call one of our media supermen(women) instead.
Bless you Amy. If only your brains and your heart were calling the shots.
I suggest using some of those large cruise ships as hospital and temporary housing for those in desperate need.
I see that the Haitian government only gets a penny on the dollar that we have sent as charity.
I wonder which corporations have pocketed the other 99%.
Is that a fact stated in the article?
"This is pretty pathetic if you're having to call me. I mean, you are the largest nurses union ... and you can't get a call in to the White House?"
_____________________________________
Hey, the union leaders who matter already got their call in to the White House. And Team Obama granted them the privilege of caving in and supporting Obama's desperately-needed Big Win: the No Insurer Left Behind abomination.
So the unions have No Business calling the White House again!
· Yr Obd't Servant
You will all love this item from the AP:
"Each American dollar roughly breaks down like this: 42 cents for disaster assistance, 33 cents for U.S. military aid, nine cents for food, nine cents to transport the food, five cents for paying Haitian survivors for recovery efforts, just under one cent to the Haitian government, and about half a cent to the Dominican Republic".
The US military receives 33% of all donations. Even being nice benefits the Fourth Reich in Haiti.
I wonder about these stats. If not read carefully, they could discourage people from donating. The figures make sense only if you are considering direct US aid from the government.
Do Doctors Without Borders, Partners in Health, California Nurse's Foundation, Oxfam, UNICEF etc. give anything to the US military? I doubt it and I hope not. That's where I give.
Joe
I'd be skeptical of these aid organizations, particularly UNICEF. I'd want to look at their balance sheets if I was donating a large sum of money.
And what is the euphamism "disaster assistance"?- a corporation?, an NGO? air traffic controllers?
Lets instead give them back their country we helped to destroy.
And the kids? 1 million unaccompanied or orphaned children or youngsters who lost at least one parent in the Jan. 12 quake.
Some young Haitians are even being released from hospitals with no one to care for them — there just aren't enough beds for them.
"Health workers are being advised to monitor and send separated/unaccompanied children to child-friendly spaces," the U.N. humanitarian office said in its latest situation report.