Fire at orphanage run by U.S. nonprofit kills 15 kids
PORTAUPRINCE, Haiti — A fire swept through a Haitian children’s home run by a U.S. nonprofit group, killing 15 children, health care workers said Friday.
RoseMarie Louis, a childcare worker at the home, told the Associated Press that the fire began around 9 p.m. Thursday and firefighters took about 1½ hours to arrive. The orphanage had been using candles for light due to problems with its generator, she said.
About half of those who died were babies or toddlers and the others were roughly 10 or 11 years old, Louis said.
Thirteen bodies were initially recovered. Justice of the Peace Raymonde Jean Antoine said two bodies were then removed Friday afternoon from the Orphanage of the Church of Bible Understanding in the Kenscoff area outside PortauPrince, the Haitian capital.
Rescue workers arrived at the scene on motorcycles and didn’t have bottled oxygen or the ambulances needed to transport the children to the hospital, said JeanFrancois Robenty, a civil protection official.
“They could have been saved,” he said. “We didn’t have the equipment to save their lives.”
The Associated Press has reported on a longstanding series of problems at two children’s homes run by the Church of Bible Understanding.
The Pennsylvania group lost accreditation for its homes after a series of inspections beginning in November 2012. Haitian inspectors faulted the group for overcrowding, unsanitary conditions and not having enough adequately trained staff.
Members of the religious group were selling expensive antiques at highend stores in New York and Los Angeles and using a portion of the profits to fund the homes.
The Associated Press made an unannounced visit to the group’s two homes, holding a total of 120 kids, in 2013 and found bunk beds with faded and worn mattresses crowded into dirty rooms. Sour air wafted through the bathrooms and stairwells. Rooms were dark and spartan, lacking comforts or decoration.
The Church of Bible Understanding operates two homes for nearly 200 children in Haiti as part of a “Christian training program,” according to its most recent nonprofit organization filing. It has operated in the country since 1977. It identifies the homes as orphanages but it is common in Haiti for impoverished parents to place children in residential care centers, where they receive lodging and widely varying education for several years but are not technically orphans.
“We take in children who are in desperate situations,” the organization says in its tax filing for 2017, the most recent year available. “Many of them were very close to death when we took them in.”