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The Business of Disaster: Where's the Haiti-Bound Money Going?
"A sweeping exercise in nation-building on a scale and scope not seen in generations," said UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon of the international donors conference on March 31 in New York, where foreign nations and other international institutions pledged $5.3 billion toward Haiti over the next 18 months, of which $1.15 billion comes from the U.S. government. Mr. Ban continued, "Today, we have mobilized to give Haiti and its people what they need most: hope for a new future."
In an informal survey of citizens' views of the international communities' plans for their nation, taken over the past two months in urban and rural Haiti, not one expressed ‘hope' or a similar perspective for the plans of the foreign powers. Their experience of ‘nation-building' under foreign powers has not been positive, either in process or in result.
Twenty-two Haitian organizations, representing religious, conflict resolution, women, human rights, development, and other sectors, had this to say about the three recent international donors' meetings: "[T]he process is characterized by a near-total exclusion of Haitian social actors and a weak and non-coordinated participation by representatives of the Haitian state... We need an alternative process which can define a new national project which incorporates strategies to counteract exclusion, political and economic dependence, and poverty."
Meanwhile, where are the billions in foreign aid money going?
Of the U.S. money, 40 cents on every dollar goes to the U.S. military, according to sources gathered from USAID and the U.N. and compiled by the Associated Press. Less than one cent goes to the Haitian government. U.S. government contracts, paid for by citizen's tax dollars, are being given out to private U.S. corporations for post-earthquake work including damage assessments, security guards, military "mission support," shipping of supplies, clean-up, construction, long-term planning, "monitoring food security," and much more.
In early March in Miami, corporations gathered for a "Haiti Summit" to discuss post-earthquake contracting possibilities. The meeting was put together by the International Peace Operations Association (IPOA), whose members are predominantly from the security industry. They include Triple Canopy, the company that took over Blackwater's contract in Iraq. IPOA's director came up with the idea for the "Haiti Summit" in the midst of their recent "Afghanistan Reconstruction Summit."
A few of those who have already received post-earthquake contracts in Haiti include:
*The GEO Group, Inc: Formerly Wackenhut Corrections Corp., the GEO Group is a private prison corporation that contracts with government agencies around the world and relies on the U.S. federal government for about 40% of its contracts. The GEO Group recently received a $260,589 contract for "guard services" from the Department of Homeland Security. GEO Group currently runs 61 facilities worldwide, including the Guantanamo Bay Migrations Operation Center, which serves as a U.S. immigrant detention center. This January GEO agreed to pay more than $40 million to settle a lawsuit concerning a beating death in one of their facilities. In 2007, GEO paid a $200,000 settlement to the family of a woman who alleged that she had been raped and beaten after being locked in a cell block with male inmates.
Although full details are not available, the newly awarded GEO contract for Haiti mandates, "extend period of performance and add fund for Haiti surge" indicating possible augmentation of their current contract for the Migrant Operations Center. Guantánamo is going to be an enormously valuable asset as we go through this," a spokesman for the State Department recently told reporters regarding U.S. efforts in Haiti.
The U.S. Congress recently granted Haitians who had already been living in the U.S. at the time of the earthquake the opportunity to apply for Temporary Protective Status, allowing them to stay in the U.S. an additional 18 months. The new bill does not protect anyone trying to flee Haiti after the earthquake.
On March 31st the New York Times reported that in the chaos following the earthquake at least 30 survivors were waved onto U.S.-bound planes by Marines. Upon their arrival they were locked up at a detention center in Florida, and they remain in custody more then 2 months later. This detention center is also run by GEO Group on a long-running contract from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Legal advocates have been trying to convince officials to release those detained to family members in the U.S.. Lawyers at the Florida Immigrant Advocacy Center have said they have received little to no mental health care.
*Development Alternatives, Inc. (DAI): DAI received a $50 million contract from USAID a few weeks after the earthquake, according to the Miami Herald. The contract was given through the USAID Office of Transition Initiatives, whose mission is to "support U.S. foreign policy...[providing] assistance targeted at key political transition and stabilization needs." According to the New York Times, DAI works closely with State Department "in disbursing funds around the world."
The New York Times reported that in Venezuela, USAID's Office of Transition Initiatives used DAI to channel funds it was disbursing to groups critical of the Chavez government throughout 2005 and 2006, according to documents obtained under a Freedom of Information Act request. Earlier this year, a DAI employee working under contract in Cuba was accused by the president of the Cuban National Assembly of working for U.S. intelligence services. The Washington Post linked the employee to "a controversial democracy-promotion program -- which had ballooned under the Bush administration -- to provide communications equipment to break the Cuban government's ‘information blockade.'"
* Fluor: Fluor received a $50,000 post-earthquake contract to "coordinate base operations and logistics support" for the U.S. military force in Haiti. Fluor is a FORTUNE 200 company which, according to their website, has a "global footprint" in 60 countries. One of their major program areas is "worldwide military support operations" including "logistics, base camp construction, housing, transportation, fuel, meals, laundry, recreation, and other support services."
Fluor has held contracts for military support in both Iraq and Afghanistan and hurricane relief along the Gulf Coast. USA Today reported that Fluor paid $3.2 million to settle allegations that they padded their bills for clean-up work after Hurricane Hugo in 1989, as well as an $8.5 million settlement in 2001 for charging the government for work done for other clients.
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9 Comments so far
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"Of the U.S. money, 40 cents on every dollar goes to the U.S. military, according to sources gathered from USAID and the U.N. and compiled by the Associated Press.[iii] Less than one cent goes to the Haitian government."
What Haitian government?
Sorry to say this, but given the billions promised, this story discusses monies that are miniscule. Where is the REAL money going?
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Why was Bill, aka, Slick Willie Clinton, and his daughter, Chelsea in Haiti to start with? Why was Slick Willie there again with George, "Mission accomplished" Bush ?
The people were living in tents made up of Bed Sheets and pillow cases. A good experienced drainage contractor could have in a couple of weeks with the help of the Army erected good safe tents for the population. However, with Slick Willie, Wall St and Photo ops were the order of the day. Shame on us and the American Press for allowing this game to go on.
Sioux Rose
This story reminds me of rape. First the generally female victims takes the assault, and then she must deal with a system that reinforces it through tests, questions, and sometimes a trial that the defense attorney will do his best to turn on her, the victim.
Haiti has been through something like a rape, and the disaster capitalists are standing by to make their blood money on the backs of those who have been through a living, ongoing hell. The psychic equivalent of getting raped twice.
I still recoil from the story CD published about the soldier's Mom who went to Haiti with medical supplies only to see soldiers standing around doing nothing. That 40%/$ sent to those who merely stand guard, is another atrocity when the money is needed to rebuild basic infrastructure and begin massive agricultural programs.
If you give someone a fish you may save their life for that day; but if you teach them to fish, they find autonomy and can preserve their own life and livelihood for many days to come.
Bring on the "fishermen." Send the soldiers elsewhere... lest they get on bended knee and start building and planting.
Well said, Sioux Rose.
Can this country ever send some force besides the military? Are we nothing in the world community but police and arms?
Why don't we round up a group of unemployed construction workers, agricultural workers, city planners, handymen or anyone with a skill and send them to help? It really is depressing to read about these unmet needs of unfortunate people and all we do is send soldiers to do nothing but intimidate the already suffering populace. Sickening.
Whatever we touch turns to shit. We should stay home and take care of problems here, of which we have plenty. Everyone else would be better off. We do not help.
The Haitian people and their organizations would do a good job, if not shut out of everything. If it weren't for us, they would still have Aristide in charge, and some hope that relief money would be well-spent.
I do not give money to Haiti relief. Only clothes and personal items. There is less chance they will be diverted. But that is just bandaid. They need major work on shelter and building, for one. And agriculture, as Sioux Rose mentioned.
Get our troops out and allow the world to help Haiti.
Joe
NoNoNoNONoNONONONOnONoNONONoNoNoNo!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
We made that place what it is!! Now were supposed to pony-up to sweep the streets leave another Puppet Dictator so sow pain and loss to that part of the world. Better we do nothing say nothing just ignore them. They'll be better off in the long run.
This is just another example of "disaster capitalism," it's shock doctrine and its shock therapy that goes along with it which Naomi Klein has written so eloquently on. What Haiti needs is help from NGOs and the UN run by the UN and for the USA to pay its bills at the UN which it has been dead beating on to cover the cost of rebuilding this country the USA has so destroyed by its own morally bankrupt policies.
AD
Perhaps we need to be reminded that Haiti was a French slave island that revolted and won.
The Imperialists have a long memory. They isolated Haiti essentially for as long as the United States has existed. We refused to acknowledge a slave rebellion.
Around 1959 Castro liberated Cuba. What is interesting here is that many U.S. interests, including those at the NYTimes such as Herbert Matthews, favored this Latin Liberation.
In 1979, during the Carter Administration, the Shah of Iran was deposed, by an Ayatollah who had been living in France. Shades of Viet Nam. Does anyone today recall the name, Ho Chi Minh? Or the battle of Dien Bien Phu?
The French were defeated and Eisenhower stepped in and promised a Referendum on the reunification of Viet Nam (It never really happened, thus the war...). Ho Chi Minh had been a restaurant employee in France. He may have been a chef.
Anyone see a pattern here, yet?
The Haitians have been systematically depleted of any capacity to defend themselves. Haiti is a case study in human resource depletion.
How about this, Rose: Secret documents show that France agreed to back the American Revolution if the New Country Refused to Recognize Haiti...
Meanwhile, earthquakes really are not supposed to be part of the Gaia Hypothesis! After all, in theory we exist on the very skin of this planet and are not capable of occluding deep fractions.
The same money going to Haiti is going to Afghanistan.
An earlier poster has pointed to the drug trade, and rightly so, although for my own part I would say that the opium trade is more fair than Big Pharma in America.
Haitians have long been survivalists. We might learn from them.
How do Haitians speak to New Orleans survivors?
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