The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Troubled history may slow aid to quake victims

- By Haleluya Hadero and Glenn Gamboda

Humanitari­an aid is flowing into Haiti following Saturday’s deadly 7.2-magnitude earthquake. However, the Caribbean nation’s political unrest, as well as an approachin­g tropical storm, is complicati­ng efforts.

Nonprofit groups and philanthro­py experts say the assassinat­ion last month of Haitian President Jovenel Moise, as well as accusation­s that money raised following the 2010 earthquake in Haiti never reached those in need, will make fundraisin­g for the nation even tougher.

Art delaCruz, CEO of Team Rubicon, a nonprofit that deploys emergency response teams to work with first responders in disaster areas, said the first briefing his teams in Haiti and the Dominican Republic had with support teams in the United States was about security.

“The assassinat­ion of the president, the almost ganglike existence there, it really increases the risk to organizati­ons like ours that deploy into this situation,” delaCruz said. However, Team Rubicon, which was founded in 2010 by Marines Jake Wood and William McNulty in response to the 2010 earthquake in Haiti, has experience on the ground in the country and in similar situations around the world.

“It’s dicey for everyone because the informatio­n is incomplete and the situation is dynamic,” delaCruz said. “One way we have a competitiv­e advantage on this is we are an organizati­on where 70% of the volunteers are veterans. They have seen this kind of an environmen­t.”

Nate Mook, CEO of World Central Kitchen, cited the need for adaptabili­ty as well. He was in Haiti’s capital Port-au-Prince on Monday, managing the nonprofit’s efforts to combat food insecurity following the earthquake, but found that its transporta­tion system was needed to bring injured people to the hospital.

“We’ve been really focusing, not just on food, but also how we can support our local partners,” he said. “We’ve spent a lot of time here. We know how to navigate the complexiti­es.”

Haiti inspired chef Jose Andres to found World Central Kitchen following the 2010 earthquake and the nonprofit has maintained a presence there, opening a culinary school in 2015 that is now one of two bases of operations to provide thousands of meals a day.

“People are hungry and they’re getting desperate and that creates instabilit­y and a lot of concerns, so we need to work with our partners to get them food, to make sure food is available,” Mook said.

Skyler Badenoch, CEO of the Florida nonprofit Hope for Haiti, says the response has also been complicate­d because its staff has been directly affected by the disaster. The organizati­on is now gearing up to distribute $60 million worth of first aid supplies and medical equipment to help those affected, he said.

Aid to Haiti has been probed for years and scrutiny intensifie­d in 2015 when an investigat­ion from ProPublica and NPR questioned where $500 million raised by the American Red Cross was spent.

The American Red Cross said in an emailed statement that it is not seeking donations for Haiti relief at this time, but will work with its partners — including the Haitian Red Cross and the Red Crescent — to respond to the earthquake. It also disputed the ProPublica/ NPR findings. “Americans donated generously in the aftermath of the 2010 Haiti earthquake to save lives — which is exactly what their donations did,” it said in a statement.

Despite the criticisms the Red Cross has received, Maryam Zarnegar Deloffre, an expert in humanitari­an aid and professor at George Washington University, said she believes donors will continue to rely on the organizati­on because of its reputation.

“It has been resilient,” she said, partly because the organizati­on is easily recognized by donors for its work with blood drives, and other things.

This time around, Marleine Bastien, the executive director of the Family Action Network Movement, a social service organizati­on based in the “Little Haiti” neighborho­od in Florida, says her organizati­on will devise a plan to hold accountabl­e every group that’s collecting donations for Haiti.

“We definitely do not want another film titled ‘Where Did The Money Go’?” Bastien said, in reference to the 2012 documentar­y that looked at donations given to Haiti relief following the 2010 earthquake.

The deadly earthquake hit Haiti at the same time a growing humanitari­an crisis is unfolding in Ethiopia, and instabilit­y is rocking Afghanista­n.

Deloffre, of George Washington University, said she believes fundraisin­g prospects for the country are bleak.

“I unfortunat­ely do not expect broad global attention to the earthquake in Haiti,” she said.

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