Jamaica Gleaner

Haitian children undergo screening, medicals

- Gareth Davis Sr/Gleaner Writer

KEN WRIGHT PIER, Port Antonio: THE 59 Haitian children with varying disabiliti­es, along with their 13 caregivers, left Portland yesterday after undergoing screening and medical checkups conducted by the Ministry of Health.

The children, along with their caregivers, first landed by boat shortly before 9 a.m. yesterday at the Ken Wright Shipping Pier in Port Antonio. The boat was escorted into port by a Jamaica Defence Force (JDF) coast guard vessel and the marine police.

Occupants of the vessel were fed afterwards and given bottled water.

The children, who were under the care of HaitiChild­ren, a nonprofit that caters to abandoned, orphaned, and disabled children in Haiti, were received by the Mustard Seed Communitie­s (MSC) and transporte­d to its Jacob’s Ladder home in Moneague, St Ann, shortly after 3:30 p.m. by the JDF mobile units, health officials, and the police.

It is understood that t he existing arrangemen­t to provide accommodat­ion and medical care to the disabled children is a twoyear initiative, and funding will be provided by HaitiChild­ren’s various establishe­d donors.

In a statement yesterday, Father Garvin Augustine, executive director of MSC Internatio­nal, said that following a series of meetings with government agencies, MSC was granted permission for the children to enter Jamaica legally and to get the necessary care in a safe environmen­t.

But it was founder and Chief Executive Officer of the non-profit HaitiChild­ren, Susie Krabecher, who first approached the leaders of MSC in Jamaica in the wake of escalating civil unrest in that country, seeking help to provide accommodat­ion for the group. The war has severely disrupted the lives of the Haitian people, especially the most vulnerable in the society.

Krabecher noted that because of their disabiliti­es, the children faced mounting challenges primarily because of the violence.

“These children, who had been living under the care of HaitiChild­ren, were forced to leave the organisati­on’s facility when growing unrest made it unsafe for them to continue living there. This resulted in the children being left without access to vital supplies and urgent medical attention,” she pointed out.

Mustard Seed Communitie­s, which was establishe­d as a nonprofit organisati­on 46 years ago by Monsignor Gregory Ramkissoon, operates 12 homes throughout the island and cares for over 450 abandoned and severely disabled children, including some impacted by HIV, as well as pregnant teens. It also has homes in four other countries across the globe.

 ?? PHOTOS BY GARETH DAVIS SR ?? Disabled Haitian children receiving medical care from a team of Ministry of Health officials at the Ken Wright Pier in Port Antonio, Portland, after their arrival in the island yesterday.
PHOTOS BY GARETH DAVIS SR Disabled Haitian children receiving medical care from a team of Ministry of Health officials at the Ken Wright Pier in Port Antonio, Portland, after their arrival in the island yesterday.
 ?? ?? Disabled Haitian children make themselves comfortabl­e as they are tended to at the Ken Wright Pier in Port Antonio, Portland, upon their arrival in the island yesterday. In the background is the vessel on which they travelled from Haiti to Jamaica.
Disabled Haitian children make themselves comfortabl­e as they are tended to at the Ken Wright Pier in Port Antonio, Portland, upon their arrival in the island yesterday. In the background is the vessel on which they travelled from Haiti to Jamaica.

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