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Haiti Relief Effort Needs Immediate Ramp-Up to Avoid Another Disaster
WASHINGTON -- President Clinton apologized on March 10 for the role that his government played in destroying a big part of Haitian agriculture: "It may have been good for some of my farmers in Arkansas, but it has not worked. ... I have to live every day with the loss of capacity to produce a rice crop in Haiti, to feed those people, because of what I did."
Beginning in the 1980s, subsidized U.S. rice wiped out thousands of Haitian rice farmers and made the country dependent on imported food.
Clinton's apology is important and presents an opportunity to change U.S. policy toward Haiti that has been a major cause of suffering in this desperately poor country.
Most urgently, the current relief effort has to be ramped up immediately to help the 1.3 million homeless Haitians before thousands are killed by rains or the hurricane season. A relatively brief rain on March 19 brought images of Haitians struggling through mud in squalid camps to try to keep from being overwhelmed by flooding.
The rainy season is just beginning and it will get much worse, especially for 200,000 homeless in 29 camps that could get washed away when the rains get heavy.
Danny Glover is an actor and chairman of the board of the TransAfrica Forum. Both he and TransAfrica have worked to help Haiti for many years.
"It doesn't make sense that they can't even get people tents two and a half months after the earthquake," he told me in Washington.
Indeed it does not: the needed tents cost about $100 apiece; even if we double the government's request for 200,000 tents, the cost is $40 million, not even 2 percent of the public and private donations coming from the U.S. and other countries.
Congress needs to turn up the heat by immediately announcing that it will fulfill its oversight role, complete with hearings and a report on how U.S. dollars - taxpayer and private donations - have been spent in Haiti. This would give some incentive to the larger organizations and U.S. government contractors to help save thousands of Haitian before they are killed by rains or the hurricane season, which begins in June.
Chemonics, which has received multiple contracts totaling tens of millions of dollars from USAID, is a subsidiary of ERLY Industries, which is also the parent company of American Rice Corp., a major beneficiary of the policies that Clinton apologized for.
The American Red Cross has received an estimated one-third of the billion dollars that American relief organizations have raised for Haiti. It has had some scandals in recent years involving the receipt of some hundreds of millions of dollars of funds that were not spent on the particular relief efforts for which they were raised.
The most urgent needs are clear: in addition to the necessary shelter and relocations, there needs to be more aid provided outside Port-au-Prince so that people are more able to live elsewhere. More aid to agriculture for the current planting season is also urgent.
The international community, which is currently providing most of Haiti's food, should commit to buying at least the current and next season's crop of locally produced rice at a profitable, guaranteed price, before distributing any imported rice. Currently, as has happened in the past, imported rice is pushing down the price of local rice and can make it difficult or impossible for farmers to survive.
The Haitian government also needs budget support; it is currently getting only a tiny fraction of U.S. government dollars, not nearly enough to even have a functioning government that is necessary for the reconstruction effort.
It is both wrong and counter-productive to try to exclude Haitians from having a voice in the future of their own country.
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9 Comments so far
Show AllReparations, reparations, reparations.
LET'S KEEP THE UNUTTERABLE SUFFERING OF HAITIANS IN THE FOREFRONT!!
I know the US has its own domestic problems, but it is ashamed the US didn't use the earthquake disaster in Haiti to do something to really improve the lives of Haitians, a sort of mini-Marshall plan.
The "another disaster" that we must work to try to stave off is worldwide. Haiti (and Katrina) were previews of coming attractions.
Over 65% of the Haitian population is involved in agriculture. This sector has been devastated by the flood of misdirected aid into Haiti.
* Farmers sold their seed during the immediate food crisis. This occurred just before the planting season. This year's crops will be severely diminished due to a lack of seed.
* Larger commercial agriculture will corner all of the inputs due to economic size and political connections. Small farmers will be re enslaved (economically) or become share croppers on their own farms. Large scale flight to the cities is the only alternative.
* Farmers cannot compete with "free" food aid. Free food will cross the border and will negatively impact the small farmer in the DR.
If you had the ability to feed your children by selling your soy oil at a substantial loss to traders who sell it to the wealthy (including relief workers and diplomats) or who sell it to traders in the DR, you'd give up your free food to buy nutritionally useless cassava.
In short, the small farming sector of Haiti has been destroyed. More than 50% of the Haitian population is immediately unemployed (and unproductive). Small-scale farming may never recover.
Clinton's apology is extremely hollow. As he apologizes for Haiti, his "foundation" is in the process of colonizing Africa and the rest of the "underdeveloped" world. He is not alone - Bill and Melinda Gates are screwing the world through UNICEF.
Disaster and the destruction of traditional economies through misdirected aid in not new. Africa ran out of seeds in 1984 and 1985 - they have not recovered.
We are to blame for not demanding more transparency in our relief efforts. Do not blindly send off a check to the Red Cross or those with the most effective advertising.
Do some due diligence. The money you send may do more damage than the disaster.
can it be? is Clinton having an attack of conscience? did he see more than he wanted during his photo ops. to Haiti?.. maybe somewhere in Port au Prince there is a little white doll with a resemblance to Bill with pins sticking out of it.
The money spent on the combined Clinton photo ops. to Haiti with there secret service body gaurds and other assorted sycophants along for the look see.... could of bought much needed supplies and done much more good than there "disaster slumming adventure" could ever do.
Hopefully there is no shortage of pins for the doll...
I doubt this an attack of Conscience. He knows he no longer in a position to do anything about it.....his goals have already been achieved. This is sort of like a guy on the dock for multiple murders claming he was "sorry for what he had done".
Clintons "legacy" is more important now then the people of Haiti.
Mark Weisbrot is the bomb.
of good.