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Haiti: One Month Later

First Posted: 04/13/10 06:12 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 04:30 PM ET

Haiti Earthquake

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) -- In the month since the worst disaster in Haitian history, an enormous international aid effort has not provided the people of Marassa 14 with the food, shelter and security they need. So they built a new community from scratch.

Cardboard street signs mark the rows of makeshift plastic tents where more than 2,500 people sleep in the dirt. Handwritten ID cards stamped by a security committee show who belongs, and women serve cheap fried plantains and breadfruit for families struggling to feed their children.

One month after 40 seconds of terrifying shaking killed more than 200,000 of their relatives and neighbors and leveled most of their capital, Haiti's endlessly resilient people are struggling to recreate their lives.

Food has yet to reach all of the 3 million people who need it. Infrastructure problems and supply backlogs continue to hamper an international aid effort that has drawn $537 million from the United States alone. Schools remain closed. And on Thursday morning, in a taste of the new horrors the impending rainy season promises to bring, an early morning downpour muddied the dirt in which 1.2 million people have pitched makeshift camp.

Downtown, hundreds of Haitians marched Thursday from the destroyed National Palace to the temporary government headquarters demanding the resignation of President Rene Preval, who has been largely out of sight since the catastrophe. He appeared Wednesday to bicker publicly with his own communications minister over the death toll.

Amid the chaos and unmet needs, there are obvious signs of progress: The United Nations, itself devastated by the quake, has established a tent-and-trailer city on the airport grounds to coordinate the efforts of 900 aid agencies who finally appear to be overcoming huge problems with communications, transportation and infrastructure.

Cell phone coverage has vastly improved. Gas stations have reopened -- though that has also meant traffic is back to its normal, intolerable state. Massive amounts of rubble are still everywhere -- loaded into dump trucks, the convoy would stretch from Port-au-Prince to Moscow, officials said -- but at least it has been pushed to the side of the road.

And while handwritten signs still plead for foreign help, opportunistic vendors are back on the streets, selling miniature American flags as soldiers' wide desert-camouflage Humvees roll by. The once ubiquitous dead, and their overpowering smell, have largely been carried away.

But even though top foreign and Haitian officials say immediate needs are being met, in villages like Marassa -- a district whose name means "twins" in Creole -- children are going unfed and families are competing for disgraceful shelter they know will not hold up for long.

In such communities, people are looking out for themselves.

In Marassa, people have made their homes in a dry riverbed that constantly floods in the rainy season. Before dawn Thursday, a surprise downpour soaked everyone's few belongings, rendered their cooking charcoal unusable and coated their beds in mud.

"We're living in a hole," said Dieusin St. Vil, a 46-year-old tailor who heads the new neighborhood's security committee. "We heard on the radio that the government was supposed to build tent cities around here, but they haven't come by."

That's because, unbeknownst to the people of Marassa, those plans have changed. On Wednesday, with just 49,000 of a requested 200,000 tents provided, officials announced that deliveries will stop. Foreign governments, aid groups and Haitian officials have decided that tents take up too much space and will not last long enough.

"Tents are great, they're a lot better than nothing, but they basically impede the process of economic development and reconstruction," said Lewis Lucke, the U.S. Special Coordinator for Relief and Reconstruction.

Instead, 250,000 families will get one sheet of plastic each between now and May 1, and will later receive temporary, earthquake-resistant structures of metal and wood. If those numbers hold up, they will help about 60 percent of the population in need.

In the meantime, there's not enough space, even in the riverbed that is Marassa -- and the self-appointed leaders decided to split their sprawling community into two camps.

In the western half, members of St. Vil's security committee patrol with sticks and make sure residents produce ID tickets that match numbers written in no obvious order on their tents.

An abandoned grandmother named Dieudone Bernard kept getting her tarps stolen, so the security committee told her to move into the hollowed-out wooden trailer of a junked tap-tap, as Haiti's colorful buses are known.

Since she can't get to one of the 16 fixed U.N. food distribution sites, the 87-year-old woman eats only if relatives bring her rice or a neighbor snags a high-energy biscuit from a handout meant for children.

Even when food aid does arrive in the village -- as did 2,000 hot meals of rice and beans from a Dominican Republic government agency Thursday afternoon -- those without the right connections risk not getting any.

"Even if the government says they are going to help everyone, everyone isn't going to get help," said the Rev. Moise Farfan, who holds prayer meetings amid the tents of Marassa every night because his church collapsed in the earthquake.

Nearby, an earthquake widow sold fried bits of potato, breadfruit and plantain from her tent, charging whatever her neighbors had in their pockets.

St. Vil appeared with a scowl, furious that it would keep them from receiving food.

"The journalists are blocking the aid!" he bellowed as a heated argument broke out among residents.

His concerns are not entirely unfounded. When pleading for aid it is much easier to speak in absolutes than to explain the much more complex reality: There is food in Haiti, but especially following the earthquake it has grown increasingly expensive and hard to get.

The price of heavily subsidized imported rice -- already at levels that caused rioting in April 2008 -- has shot up 25 percent since the earthquake to $3.71 a 2.7-kilo (6-pound) bag, according to USAID. Corn is up more than 25 percent, wheat increased by half. Charcoal, needed for cooking, has shot up 17 percent.

With no jobs or homes, and nowhere to go, help from others -- and each other -- means everything.

"The conditions here are no good, but being dead is even worse," said Johnny Joseph, a 48-year-old father of six. "As long as you're living, you might have a friend who's alive too.

One month after 40 seconds of terrifying shaking killed more than 200,000 of their relatives and neighbors and leveled most of their capital, Haiti's endlessly resilient people are struggling to recreate their lives.

Food has yet to reach all of the 3 million people who need it. Infrastructure problems and supply backlogs continue to hamper an international aid effort that has drawn $537 million from the United States alone. Schools remain closed. And on Thursday morning, in a taste of the new horrors the impending rainy season promises to bring, an early morning downpour muddied the dirt in which 1.2 million people have pitched makeshift camp.

Downtown, hundreds of Haitians marched Thursday from the destroyed National Palace to the temporary government headquarters demanding the resignation of President Rene Preval, who has been largely out of sight since the catastrophe. He appeared Wednesday to bicker publicly with his own communications minister over the death toll.

Amid the chaos and unmet needs, there are obvious signs of progress: The United Nations, itself devastated by the quake, has established a tent-and-trailer city on the airport grounds to coordinate the efforts of 900 aid agencies who finally appear to be overcoming huge problems with communications, transportation and infrastructure.

Cell phone coverage has vastly improved. Gas stations have reopened – though that has also meant traffic is back to its normal, intolerable state. Massive amounts of rubble are still everywhere – loaded into dump trucks, the convoy would stretch from Port-au-Prince to Moscow, officials said – but at least it has been pushed to the side of the road.

And while handwritten signs still plead for foreign help, opportunistic vendors are back on the streets, selling miniature American flags as soldiers' wide desert-camouflage Humvees roll by. The once ubiquitous dead, and their overpowering smell, have largely been carried away.

But even though top foreign and Haitian officials say immediate needs are being met, in villages like Marassa – a district whose name means "twins" in Creole – children are going unfed and families are competing for disgraceful shelter they know will not hold up for long.

In such communities, people are looking out for themselves.

In Marassa, people have made their homes in a dry riverbed that constantly floods in the rainy season. Before dawn Thursday, a surprise downpour soaked everyone's few belongings, rendered their cooking charcoal unusable and coated their beds in mud.

"We're living in a hole," said Dieusin St. Vil, a 46-year-old tailor who heads the new neighborhood's security committee. "We heard on the radio that the government was supposed to build tent cities around here, but they haven't come by."

That's because, unbeknownst to the people of Marassa, those plans have changed. On Wednesday, with just 49,000 of a requested 200,000 tents provided, officials announced that deliveries will stop. Foreign governments, aid groups and Haitian officials have decided that tents take up too much space and will not last long enough.

"Tents are great, they're a lot better than nothing, but they basically impede the process of economic development and reconstruction," said Lewis Lucke, the U.S. Special Coordinator for Relief and Reconstruction.

Instead, 250,000 families will get one sheet of plastic each between now and May 1, and will later receive temporary, earthquake-resistant structures of metal and wood. If those numbers hold up, they will help about 60 percent of the population in need.

In the meantime, there's not enough space, even in the riverbed that is Marassa – and the self-appointed leaders decided to split their sprawling community into two camps.

In the western half, members of St. Vil's security committee patrol with sticks and make sure residents produce ID tickets that match numbers written in no obvious order on their tents.

An abandoned grandmother named Dieudone Bernard kept getting her tarps stolen, so the security committee told her to move into the hollowed-out wooden trailer of a junked tap-tap, as Haiti's colorful buses are known.

Since she can't get to one of the 16 fixed U.N. food distribution sites, the 87-year-old woman eats only if relatives bring her rice or a neighbor snags a high-energy biscuit from a handout meant for children.

Even when food aid does arrive in the village – as did 2,000 hot meals of rice and beans from a Dominican Republic government agency Thursday afternoon – those without the right connections risk not getting any.

"Even if the government says they are going to help everyone, everyone isn't going to get help," said the Rev. Moise Farfan, who holds prayer meetings amid the tents of Marassa every night because his church collapsed in the earthquake.

Nearby, an earthquake widow sold fried bits of potato, breadfruit and plantain from her tent, charging whatever her neighbors had in their pockets.

St. Vil appeared with a scowl, furious that it would keep them from receiving food.

"The journalists are blocking the aid!" he bellowed as a heated argument broke out among residents.

His concerns are not entirely unfounded. When pleading for aid it is much easier to speak in absolutes than to explain the much more complex reality: There is food in Haiti, but especially following the earthquake it has grown increasingly expensive and hard to get.

The price of heavily subsidized imported rice – already at levels that caused rioting in April 2008 – has shot up 25 percent since the earthquake to $3.71 a 2.7-kilo (6-pound) bag, according to USAID. Corn is up more than 25 percent, wheat increased by half. Charcoal, needed for cooking, has shot up 17 percent.

With no jobs or homes, and nowhere to go, help from others – and each other – means everything.

"The conditions here are no good, but being dead is even worse," said Johnny Joseph, a 48-year-old father of six. "As long as you're living, you might have a friend who's alive too.

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PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) -- In the month since the worst disaster in Haitian history, an enormous international aid effort has not provided the people of Marassa 14 with the food, shelter and securi...
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) -- In the month since the worst disaster in Haitian history, an enormous international aid effort has not provided the people of Marassa 14 with the food, shelter and securi...
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11:00 AM on 02/12/2010
I know that this is an extremely complicated situation and that the scale of the disaster is enormous, but even so it's hard to escape the conclusion that what the Haitians have managed to achieve they have done themselves, by scavenging through the rubble and finding items to use for shelter and food, than anything they have been given by aid agencies. What happened to my money? What happened to everyone's money? I hope the Haitians are aware that the ordinary people of the world came to their aid in large numbers and with empathy for their plight and that it has only been the politicians who have let them down. I'd hate to think they thought we had all abandoned them or didn't care.
09:09 AM on 02/12/2010
If you want accurate, daily reports about Haiti, listen to Dennis Bernstein on Flashpoints, KPFA, listener-sponsored radio out of Berkley. Reports directly from individuals on the ground in Haiti who are actively involved in providing aid directly to the earthquake victims indicate that all these donations pouring in from around the world are not getting to the people. As the rainy season approaches, we're looking at another round of deaths from preventable diseases. There appears to be a plan afoot to force survivors out of their cities and into the countryside where there are no schools, hospitals, infrastructure. It would appear that resources that are available, like those tents, are being deliberately withheld to force people to leave their homes, so that the cities can be gentrified. Bill Clinton is said to be running this show. Someone likely is getting very rich off the generous donations of individuals. As for the U.S. military and U.N. "peacekeepers" they seem to bear some responsibility for the bottle-neck.
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notb observer
Technically it's a micro auto-bio...
04:06 AM on 02/12/2010
So, 1 sheet of plastic is supposed to take care of a family's shelter needs for 3 months until May... Must be some kind of plastic sheet that we haven't seen in the US yet because it is so advanced and top secret. Let's hope they also send down some of that top secret rice that fills you up for 3 months too.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carolab
Walking an 87-year-old in the sand isn't easy
03:32 AM on 02/12/2010
Foreign governments, aid groups and Haitian officials have decided that tents take up too much space and will not last long enough.

"Tents are great, they're a lot better than nothing, but they basically impede the process of economic development and reconstruction," said Lewis Lucke, the U.S. Special Coordinator for Relief and Reconstruction.

___________

In other words, there's no MONEY in it. Developers need the land to make $ on this disaster.
08:03 AM on 02/12/2010
of course.........what better time to start from scratch
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FHTB
11:42 PM on 02/11/2010
It didn't take long for Haiti to start being relegated to international news page or fifth or sixth story on the Evening News...that being said, there has been alot of other major news sharing the stage...still, let's not allow Haiti to once again fade into history where we only concern ourselves with it when a crisis erupts...sadly, the country ALWAYS has been in crisis in recent memory.
11:24 PM on 02/11/2010
I leave you with this good people. I will be voting for President Obama on his re-election day. Good evening.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carolab
Walking an 87-year-old in the sand isn't easy
03:32 AM on 02/12/2010
Well, that's one.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Hollywooddeed
Bagger, please.
08:47 AM on 02/12/2010
One of millions.
peowlemeow
Democrat,non-military,undereducated,overworked
11:23 PM on 02/11/2010
I got a one month overview from UNICEF and decided to just send them a monthly amount.It's never enough but it's more than nothing and it is a good thing to have a trusted outfit to send dough to.
I think America should develop a solar panel roof that could also work as a lean-to so people could cook or read or just have some of the simple things electricity can provide.Maybe a small icebox and an electric wok ?Working shelter would go far in a country without so much.
11:40 PM on 02/11/2010
The relief effort should mix in some family planning. The Haitian population growth is simply unsustainable. Why hasn't the pope visited an 80% Catholic nation in dire need of help?
peowlemeow
Democrat,non-military,undereducated,overworked
12:00 AM on 02/12/2010
Haitian population growth was sustainable until subsidized agriculture started making the farms unable to sustain themselves.It was an agrarian culture and nobody says much about other farm societies that have tons of kids.The almost timeless quality of non mechanized farming is hard to appreciate and in more industrialized societies it is an infuriating menace that deducts more than it provides in work or product.Other societies with lots of kids,multi-spouse South Africa for instance,are working with family planning principles and practices.The Vatican may visit Haiti,I don't think they will.Don't forget Miami is for Cubans and those that will help them escape communists.Speaking educated French probably doesn't help but Haiti will still have it's own church and they don't have much else.Catholic relief may swoop in and many are probably on the ground as residents already.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
sviolette
Cops Pepper Spraying the Constitution!!!
01:52 AM on 02/12/2010
The catholic religion doesn't allow for birth control to be used.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
charmante
11:13 PM on 02/11/2010
One month later, Haiti grass root leaders are at work planning for the future of their country:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/avi-lewis/watch-haiti---dreaming-fo_b_458997.html
11:09 PM on 02/11/2010
I have faced a few difficult times throughout the years. But nothing I have been through compares with what the folks of Haiti are dealing with. Gosh, I respect these people.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
CR46
spay/neuter and adopt
03:58 AM on 02/12/2010
I spent 11 days in Haiti, working in a tent city hospital the conditions these people are living in are in describable.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gtalkspolitics
11:06 PM on 02/11/2010
Finally the entire world is focus on Haiti , it's a brighter days ahead
10:58 PM on 02/11/2010
One thing seems for sure. The right wing never disproves the hypothesis that these narrow minded and ha+te filled individuals continue to take glee and profit from the suffering of those beneath their economic station.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PhilipTaylor
Legalized Bribery is an Oxymoron - must END
10:55 PM on 02/11/2010
DONATE TO GET THE ECONOMY GOING AGAIN!

Use the money to hire the Haitians to HELP the Haitians!

They need the funds and have been living on $2 per day for over a decade!

They know more about where good water and food are than OUTSIDERS KNOW!

Get SMART and Hire the locals to help the locals - BY THE MILLIONS!

DO NOT HIRE USA CONTRACTORS or NGOS!

Hire at Random at $2-$5 per person per day YES! Make them sign for it if you want!

What is the RISK compared to paying CONTRACTORS $MILLIONS AND $BILLIONS to do GROSSLY INFLATED (COST) WORK like 1RAQ and Afghanistan:

In !raq and Afghanistan it costs 100 times the real cost to build a school!

KBR-Haliburton charges $40 for a soldiers Cafeteria Breakfast or Lunch and $100 for a BAG of Laundry! KBR takes almost $8 Billion from our Government per year to serve meals and do laundry! OUTRAGEOUS!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PhilipTaylor
Legalized Bribery is an Oxymoron - must END
10:57 PM on 02/11/2010
Why would 0bama enlist Bush for AID to a poor country?

That is like sending the a grade school when the Saints are NEEDED!

Remember he sat there for 7 minutes when he knew planes were hitting the TWIN TOWERS!

He sat in Crawford while FLOODS wiped out 20% of the South!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
02:18 AM on 02/12/2010
Putting him with Clinton shows that Haiti relief is not a dem-repub issue. Having Bush along will get some of the cons to open their wallets and possibly cut down on some complaints about how the administration handles the situation
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Paula Ann
10:59 PM on 02/11/2010
excellent idea.......
10:47 PM on 02/11/2010
I'm really not trying to sound like a je-rk here but you cant rebuild a country in a month. What is it with people nowadays. There's serious magic wand syndrome going on here.
10:37 PM on 02/11/2010
I find it ironic that GWB is on the tube presenting a picture of feeling pain and sorrow for the people of Haiti. How many children cry at night on the streets of that country who have lost their mommies and papas? Our hearts go out to them. How many children cried on the streets of Iraq during the carnage that GWB needlessly brought down upon them?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
charmante
10:47 PM on 02/11/2010
GWB in collusion with the most reactionaries elements of the Haitian elite placed an economic embargo on Haiti causing a lot of misery in the process.
10:48 PM on 02/11/2010
How does this make you feel seeing this?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JmE5gaiU7gQ
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lakat
Haiti lives.
10:21 PM on 02/11/2010
Never in a million years would I give to Clinton/Bush fund nor to any NGO, the Red Cross et al. I gave my money to Partners in Health (PiH), please google it for authenticity. I can tell you that Dr. Paul Farmer (Department Head at Harvard Medical) is above reproach, do all the research you need to feel comfortable then give to this fine organization that was already in Haiti when the earthquake hit. There are other organizations or people you can give to but you need to make sure they are legit. The money given to Red Cross and other large orgs, have not filtered down to the people. You have no way of knowing if your hard earned gift even got to Haiti. That is not okay with me and I will continue to find deserving people to give to so they can eat and have clean water.
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stella801
... --- ...
10:33 PM on 02/11/2010
Many of the comments here make me sad. Why can't we just acknowledge this country is in total chaos and lend a hand. I find solace in other comments who share my view.
peowlemeow
Democrat,non-military,undereducated,overworked
11:27 PM on 02/11/2010
Is partners in health flying or shipping tons of food ?I think your comment is rude and antagonistic toward outfits that produce results as well as the one you like.