Haiti Conference: Nations Call For Haitian Government To Lead Rebuilding

ROB GILLIES   01/26/10 01:20 AM ET   AP

Haiti Conference
Haiti Conference

MONTREAL — Haiti must lead the effort to rebuild after its devastating earthquake, the United States and other nations said as Haiti's prime minister acknowledged that relief efforts so far have fallen dramatically short.

"To date we have not been able to feed everybody, to give water to everybody," Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive said Monday at the end of a daylong conference intended to review and improve the delivery of short-term aid as well as chart a course for long-term recovery.

Haiti's magnitude-7 earthquake killed an estimated 200,000 people and left the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere virtually without a functioning government. It wrecked the presidential palace, parliament, government ministries and the U.N. headquarters, among thousands of other structures.

The conference did not result in any firm financial commitments, but Canadian Foreign Minister Lawrence Cannon said talks had produced "the beginnings of a roadmap" for helping get Haiti back on its feet, as well as a "shared vision" of the island nation's longer-term rebuilding.

"The government of Haiti must and will be in the lead," U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said. "We cannot any longer in the 21st century be making decisions for people and their futures without listening, and without giving them the opportunity to be as involved and make as many decisions as possible."

Bellerive said Haiti can lead the rebuilding effort after the Jan. 12 earthquake.

"Haitians continue to work in precarious conditions," Bellerive said in opening remarks, but Haiti's government "is in the position to assume the leadership expected of it by its people in order to relaunch the country on the path to reconstruction."

The participating countries agreed in a joint statement that "an initial 10-year commitment is essential."

Clinton also said the U.S. would host an international donors conference for Haitian relief in March at U.N. headquarters in New York.

Clinton told the concluding news conference that it would be unwise to organize a donors conference now, in the absence of a reliable assessment of Haiti's needs and a solid roadmap for how to coordinate and execute an international recovery plan.

"We are still in an emergency" with many Haitians suffering and desperate for immediate relief, she said, adding that the Montreal talks were a first step. "We're trying to do this in the correct order," she said.

Robert Fox, the executive director of Oxfam, a group that works with developing countries, agreed that the international community should not start investing in huge projects until there's a clearer picture of what's needed.

"If we move too quickly, we fall into the trap of rebuilding the Haiti that existed two weeks ago. The Haiti that existed two weeks ago we do not want to rebuild," Fox said. "It was a country of inequality, and of poor infrastructure"

Clinton also said an effective recovery strategy for Haiti must take into account a sudden rush of thousands of quake survivors from Port-au-Prince into the countryside.

Clinton, speaking to reporters during a break in a daylong conference, said she was encouraged by Bellerive's analysis. He told the conference that the exodus from Port-au-Prince has added a new twist to the post-quake challenge.

"The distribution of people (and) their needs have changed," Bellerive said. "We have to reassess the whole country," in terms of job creation and requirements for housing.

Haiti's government wants many of the homeless to leave the capital city of 2 million people, to look for better shelter with relatives or others elsewhere. Officials estimate that about 235,000 have taken advantage of its offer of free transport to leave the city, and many others left on their own, some even walking.

Clinton also called on other countries to join Brazil, Argentina and other Latin American nations in contributing to the U.N.-led military and police force in Haiti.

She called Monday's conference "the beginning of a conversation" about Haiti's future that will continue for years.

On her flight to Montreal from Washington, Clinton told reporters traveling with her that the U.S., in collaboration with international donors and organizations, had been mapping out a plan for Haiti's development for months before the quake. She indicated this could be the basis for a revised plan now.

"I don't want to start from scratch, but we have to recognize the changed challenges that we are now confronting," she said.

Asked about a news report that Haiti would request $3 billion in aid during the Montreal conference, Bellerive said no specific request was made and that the Haitian government is still assessing its financial requirements.

"The government has no official number," he told reporters.

Attending the conference were foreign ministers from more than a dozen countries, plus representatives of eight international bodies, including the United Nations and the Organization of American States, and six major non-governmental organizations. At the conference in New York in March donations will be pledged for Haiti's recovery and rebuilding

___

AP National Security Writer Robert Burns contributed to this story.

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MONTREAL — Haiti must lead the effort to rebuild after its devastating earthquake, the United States and other nations said as Haiti's prime minister acknowledged that relief efforts so far have...
MONTREAL — Haiti must lead the effort to rebuild after its devastating earthquake, the United States and other nations said as Haiti's prime minister acknowledged that relief efforts so far have...
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09:52 PM on 01/26/2010
And, what a joke the Clinton/Bush Initiative! Both Presidents, along with Bush 41, were instrumental in the downfall of Hait, with embargoes & "political" interference in the Haitian electoral process.
09:47 PM on 01/26/2010
And, Madame Secretary, stop the assine "Pentagon Updates". This is not a military conquest, it is a "Humanitarian Effort". Butt out!!! And, let Haiti & the U.N. do their work in cooperation with the International community.
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07:09 PM on 01/26/2010
Hillary Clintons sounds so knowing and arrogant. Doesn't she understand that the things to demands and lectures to other nations about don't apply to the United States? . In this article she says:

"We cannot any longer in the 21st century be making decisions for people and their futures without listening, and without giving them the opportunity to be as involved and make as many decisions as possible."

Does she really think the Clinton, Bush and Obama administrations listen/ed to the will of the people?
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drjasonmd
Shalom, compa!
12:43 PM on 01/26/2010
Which Haitian government are they talking about? The ones the Haitians elected or the one Bush shoved down their throats?

Ironic that they are having this conference in Montreal since that's where they hatched the plan for regime change in Haiti in the first place.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mrtinnc
"Hey you dang woodchucks, quit chucking my wood!"
12:43 PM on 01/26/2010
Why not award Haiti the Summer Olympics, that way thy can rebuild thier infrastructure to international standards, (with corporate backing) and provide continuos jobs for all the Haitian people by creating a sports/ tourism mecca.
12:10 PM on 01/26/2010
Great, the normal 10% will get to the people who need it the most.
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skialethia
αω vs military might
11:37 AM on 01/26/2010
Another exercise in futility, pretension and hypocrisy. I remember the donors conference for Gaza at Sharm-el-Sheikh. So much money pledged!

The people in Gaza are worst off than ever!!! They have not been able to rebuild. Their hospitals are understocked on medical supplies. People there are teetering on the edge, the bombed out sewer system is in such disrepair it's polluting their water and making kids sick and their power plant is shutting down this Friday because they can't get fuel to run it and Isrl turned off their lights and it's the only plant they were depending on and it too is in disrepair and was bombed out.

So spare me this hypocritical charade!
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calhar
11:28 AM on 01/26/2010
If the future of Haiti is anything like the past,all of the money donated is going to do absolutly nothing for the people of Haiti.Somebody is going to end up with the money and the status quo will still remain.All that you will see of it is some food parcels being given out.Take a look at the past disasters,all of the money somehow seemed to disapear with no results whatsoever.Anybody with good intentions is having sheep pulled over their eyes.Look at Indonesia,New Orleans,the Philippines,and others.Just remember"the road to hell is paved with good intentions"
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skialethia
αω vs military might
11:42 AM on 01/26/2010
This is just another great photo op for Hillary.
11:05 AM on 01/26/2010
?????????....there's a Haitian Government...?????
Who is he?
10:42 AM on 01/26/2010
Insanity is repeating the same thing and expecting different results.

The Hatian Government is the reason why there is such poverty in that nation.

Time to try something new.
10:18 AM on 01/26/2010
I can see that the "trolls,morons & degenerate`s are out today ,I`ll comment with boxing gloves on and a glock in my waist band. WTF People!!! Are they kidding me ??? Haiti & the Haitian people take leadership of their country...really??? It had to take a damn earthquake to wake up the UN & USA to the plight of the Haitian people who for years were not not allowed to run or control their economy or provide infrastructure to their country.
Has anyone forgotten 1915-1934 The first invasion of Haiti by the USMC for the protection of the Haitian American Sugar Company and their business interest & Gen.Smedley Butler (yes that name sounds familiar the author of "War is a Racket" I mentioned here before) The US was in Haiti for 19 years with the seal of approval of Pres.Herbert Hoover until the Haitians turned up the heat & started striking because of harsh work conditions and reduction in incentive scholarships for city students.

To some of you that may seem glamorous work or whatever ,but the "corvee" system has never been.Haiti has been down this long road before...so is this just fu*kery again or is the western world actually going to allow Haiti to become economically stable or bring back the dreaded "Service Technique" system ???
11:07 AM on 01/26/2010
We will never leave Haiti...there's minerals and oil there....this place is the next Nigeria.
10:18 AM on 01/26/2010
Haiti has no function government.
A regional entity has to step-up, with Haitian advisers at every step.
All foreign loans to Haiti must be forgiven. Now.
Aid must be in the form of grants - no more cancerous loans.
09:38 AM on 01/26/2010
The same 10% of the Haitians who have kept the nation in poverty will skim 30% off the top of any aid.
11:09 AM on 01/26/2010
you got that right.......................and they'll be the next oligarchs when the oil companies show up....the plight of the common people will never change.
BritishColumbian
American/Canadian liberal
09:29 AM on 01/26/2010
Once again an American slant to what happened in Montreal...Clinton and America was a participant not the leader...as it should be.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
medicontheedge
big loud broad
09:03 AM on 01/26/2010
Sometimes Mother Earth just gets tired of us all, and shrugs her shoulders to get rid of the itch. It's like that with Haiti. and Sri Lanka. And L.A.... etc etc etc