The Manila Times

Funding for Haiti cholera victims ‘not easy to raise’

-

UNITED NATIONS: The United Nations is struggling to raise $200 million to help the families of victims of a deadly outbreak of cholera in Haiti, a senior UN of

The financial aid follows the United Nations’ admission that it had a moral responsibi­lity to help Haiti deal with the epidemic that has been blamed on UN peacekeepe­rs.

Almost 10,000 people have been killed and 700,000 affected since the outbreak in 2010. There are still 500 new cases of cholera reported every week.

UN envoy David Nabarro, who is leading negotiatio­ns with donors and with the Haitian government on the aid package, said drawing voluntary contributi­ons that we would be able to mobilize 200 million,” Nabarro said.

UN Secretary General Ban Kimoon is due to announce later this month the aid package for the victims’ families and a separate fund also of $200 million to build up Haiti’s health infrastruc­ture.

The envoy said it was “a reasonable amount of money, both for payments to families of individual­s who died and for communitie­s affected by cholera”, as well as a scholarshi­p scheme for children.

The internatio­nal drive to raise - peal for $120 million to help the country cope with the devastatio­n of Hurricane Matthew is faltering.

Only 25 percent of the funding appeal has been raised so far, ac

“The hurricane has created a new set of dangers because in the communitie­s affected the risk of cholera is high,” said Nabarro who returned from a trip to Haiti to assess damage.

Studies have traced the cholera outbreak to Nepalese peacekeepe­rs that the UN dispatched to Haiti after the massive 2010 earthquake.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines