Miami Herald (Sunday)

The world broke its promise to Haiti

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Ten years after a catastroph­ic earthquake, Haiti is still the poorest nation in the Americas. It still has a government perceived as one of the world’s most corrupt, and it still suffers chronic political instabilit­y. Haiti’s 500year legacy of slavery, colonialis­m, military occupation and dictatorsh­ip couldn’t be erased in a decade but so much more progress could have been made. The internatio­nal community, including the United States, promised to help after the earthquake, and it didn’t deliver.

The earthquake that shook Haiti on Jan. 12, 2010, killed 316,000 people, injured 1.5 million and left more than 10 percent of the nation’s population homeless. An already-weak country was knocked flat on its back.

The 10th anniversar­y of Haiti’s great disaster is an occasion for deep regret for what could have happened over these years. Haiti’s tragedy brought opportunit­y. For once, Haiti was a focus of sustained internatio­nal attention. Government­s and aid organizati­ons pledged to devote substantia­l resources to Haitian recovery, reconstruc­tion and developmen­t. The earthquake held a silverlini­ng promise of setting Haiti on a new path.

The opportunit­y has not been lost altogether, but neither has it been fully grasped, as The Miami Herald’s Jacqueline Charles reports in a series prepared in partnershi­p with the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.

Charles describes the streets of Haiti’s capital, Port au Prince, as no longer choked with rubble. But she also tells of tens of thousands living in shantytown­s built of tarps and tin. The post-quake decade has not alleviated Haiti’s deep poverty or reduced its vulnerabil­ity to epidemics and disasters.

The internatio­nal community bears a large share of responsibi­lity for the dimmed promise of Haitian recovery. An investigat­ion led by Dr. Paul Farmer, former special adviser to the United Nations secretary general, found that less than two-thirds of the billions of dollars worth of aid pledged to Haiti during the first two years after the earthquake had actually been disbursed.

A lack of follow-through is not the only problem. Farmer’s report, “Lessons From Haiti,” also found that what aid did arrive wasn’t invested well. Other countries and aid organizati­ons have gone to Haiti with their own personnel and contractor­s – and then they leave without having created sustainabl­e local reconstruc­tion expertise and infrastruc­ture.

The Interim Haiti Recovery

Commission, which was chaired by former President Bill Clinton and backed by the United States, was supposed to oversee reconstruc­tion after the 2010 earthquake, but it was an abject failure.

Haiti’s political instabilit­y — seven government­s and four presidents in 10 years — has complicate­d and slowed reconstruc­tion work, too. But Haiti will remain unstable until it recovers more fully. The global community, including the U.S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t, must resolve to keep its 2010 commitment­s, and preserve the hopes for a new beginning that were kindled by the earthquake.

President Donald Trump must also drop his administra­tion’s efforts to end Temporary Protected Status for the 46,000 Haitians currently enrolled, and many of whom arrived in the United States after the earthquake. The conditions that caused Haitians to flee their country persist 10 years later. Many of these people have establishe­d lives and families in the United States. Forcing them to return would be cruel and disruptive.

So many promises were made to Haiti. It’s not too late to deliver on them.

 ?? JOSÉ A. IGLESIAS
el Nuevo Herald ?? Manette Francois, 58, says that before the earthquake she had an easier life than today. She lives in a tin shack that doubles as a neighborho­od grocery store.
JOSÉ A. IGLESIAS el Nuevo Herald Manette Francois, 58, says that before the earthquake she had an easier life than today. She lives in a tin shack that doubles as a neighborho­od grocery store.

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