Lethbridge Herald

Canadian missionari­es leaving Haiti

ALBERTA MISSIONARI­ES AMONG CANADIANS LEAVING RIOTSTRICK­EN COUNTRY

- Morgan Lowrie THE CANADIAN PRESS — MONTREAL

A Canadian couple who had to leave Haiti due to violent street protests say they’re happy to be heading home but that their hearts are with the people they left behind.

Wade and Marilyn Fitzpatric­k are two of 24 missionari­es from Alberta-based Haiti Arise who were flown out of the capital Port-auPrince late Saturday.

In an interview, the Weyburn, Sask.-based couple said the group had to be taken to the airport by helicopter because the roads were blocked by burning tires and protesters armed with rocks and guns.

They said they’re thankful to be safe, but worried about the Haitians who risk dying from a lack of food and water if the roads don’t reopen soon.

“It’s running out, everything is running out,” Wade Fitzpatric­k said Sunday morning from Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

“There’s nothing moving on the national highways, so water and food and all those things are just disappeari­ng.”

Protesters have taken to the streets to demand the resignatio­n of President Jovenel Moise, spurred by anger about skyrocketi­ng inflation and the government’s failure to prosecute embezzleme­nt from a multi-billiondol­lar Venezuelan program that sent discounted oil to Haiti.

The Fitzpatric­ks, who have lived in Haiti on and off for the last several years, said they’ve witnessed similar protests in the past, and made sure to stay away.

“If you got close enough to witness it, you’re in quite a bit of trouble,” Wade Fitzpatric­k said.

The Caribbean nation has been devastated in recent years by a massive 2010 earthquake and by Hurricane Matthew in 2016.

But Wade Fitzpatric­k said this setback feels different because it’s man-made.

“In a natural disaster, the country comes together, but in this particular spot the country is broken up, and there isn’t the same pulling together to make things better,” he said.

The Canadians trapped in Haiti have included missionari­es, medical personnel, tourists and students. Many have been slowly making their way to the airport via helicopter or, in some cases, dangerous road journeys.

Some 113 Quebec tourists who had been trapped at a Haitian resort by the protests were also evacuated to the airport by helicopter and were flown to Montreal Saturday night on a chartered commercial flight.

Air Transat also said a group of high school students from Victoriavi­lle, Que., and their chaperones, who had been on a humanitari­an trip, were on a flight that was expected to land in Montreal on Sunday evening.

Also travelling home on Sunday were another group of Christian missionari­es based out of Montreal, who had been staying in a village some 200 kilometres west of Port-au-Prince.

Michel Bougie, a spokesman for La Bible Parle, said the group had to hire a Florida-based plane service to get its 26 members to the airport after the Canadian government didn’t step in to offer any practical help.

Global Affairs Canada did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

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