Los Angeles Times

A year after Haiti earthquake, many still seek food and shelter

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LES CAYES, Haiti — The cinderbloc­k home with a tin roof that Erline Castel and Dieunord Ernest rented was among the more than 130,000 houses damaged or destroyed by a powerful earthquake that struck southern Haiti last year, killing more than 2,200 people.

In the days after the magnitude 7.2 quake hit, they gathered sheets, tarpaulins and wood and made a shelter for themselves and their three children. More than a year after the Aug. 14, 2021, quake, the family is still living in the same makeshift tent like hundreds of others, and still wondering if anyone will help them.

If recent history is any guide, few people will.

The Associated Press visited several camps surroundin­g the southern coastal city of Les Cayes, which was one of the hardest-hit areas, and many people complained that no government official had visited them despite repeated promises of aid.

As the family waited for help, Ernest died of prostate cancer last year. Today, Castel is alone, fighting for her family’s survival like many struggling to restart their lives.

In addition, others are victimizin­g the quake victims. In one camp, friends of the property owner are trying to take back the land where the refugees settled. Thugs have ripped apart the shacks, thrown rocks at families and tried to set the camp on fire twice in recent months.

The camp, like several others, also floods quickly when it rains, forcing hundreds to flee to higher ground as they watch their belongings get drenched.

“I don’t know how long I can continue like this,” said Renel Cene, a 65-year-old who lost four children in the earthquake.

Families walk to get well water, sometimes letting the sediment settle before drinking it. Many have no work. They rely on the neighbors for their only meal of the day.

Those living in the camps say they have heard on the radio that local government officials have met with internatio­nal leaders about the post-earthquake plights, but they question if they’ll ever be helped.

“So far, it’s all been promises,” said 55-year-old farmer Nicolas Wilbert Ernest. “I don’t know how long I have to wait.”

On the earthquake’s anniversar­y, a group of government officials held a news conference describing the advances of the administra­tion of Prime Minister Ariel Henry, who began leading the country shortly after President Jovenel Moïse was assassinat­ed on July 7, 2021.

The government says it has planted 400 tons of beans, cleaned 10,000 meters of canals, distribute­d 22,000 bags of fertilizer and donated more than 300,000 baskets filled with basic goods. It has provided $100 each to vulnerable people in tens of thousands of homes across the south. The state also opened a temporary bridge over the GrandeAnse River in early August.

But UNICEF warned last week that more than 250,000 children still have no access to adequate schools and that the majority of 1,250 schools destroyed or damaged have not been rebuilt. It noted that a lack of funds and a spike in violence have delayed reconstruc­tion.

Increasing­ly powerful gangs have seized control of the main road leading from the capital of Port-au-Prince to Haiti’s southern region, disrupting efforts to provide food, water and other basic goods to those in need. A lot of organizati­ons have been forced to pay bribes to avoid staff being kidnapped while driving to the south.

Cindy Cox-Roman, chief executive of Washington­based nonprofit HelpAGE USA, said there is “a great feeling on the part of people there that they’re alone in this.”

Cassendy Charles, emergency program manager for the Washington-based nonprofit Mercy Corps, estimates it could take five years for the region to fully recover from the earthquake.

 ?? Odelyn Joseph Associated Press ?? WOMEN BUILD a frame for a makeshift shelter at Camp Devirel in the coastal city of Les Cayes, Haiti.
Odelyn Joseph Associated Press WOMEN BUILD a frame for a makeshift shelter at Camp Devirel in the coastal city of Les Cayes, Haiti.

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