Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Desperatio­n, pressure for aid increase in Haiti after quake

- By Mark Stevenson and Evens Sanon

LES CAYES, Haiti — Pressure for a coordinate­d response to Haiti’s deadly weekend earthquake mounted Wednesday as more bodies were pulled from the rubble and the injured continued to arrive from remote areas in search of medical care. Aid was slowly trickling in to help thousands left homeless.

Internatio­nal aid workers on the ground said hospitals in the areas worst hit by Saturday’s quake are mostly incapacita­ted and medical equipment is desperatel­y needed. But the government told at least one foreign organizati­on that has been operating in the country for nearly three decades that it didn’t need assistance from hundreds of its medical volunteers.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Ariel Henry said Wednesday

that his administra­tion will work to avoid “repeat history on the mismanagem­ent and coordinati­on of aid,” a reference to the chaos that followed the country’s devastatin­g 2010 earthquake, when the government was accused of not getting all of the money raised by donors to the people who needed it.

In a message on his Twitter account, Mr. Henry said that he “personally” will ensure that the aid gets to the victims this time around.

The Core Group, a coalition of key internatio­nal diplomats from the United States and other nations that monitors Haiti, said in a statement Wednesday that its members are “resolutely committed to working alongside national and local authoritie­s to ensure that impacted people and areas receive adequate assistance as soon as possible.”

Haiti’s Civil Protection Agency raised the number of deaths from the quake to 2,189 from an earlier count of 1,941 and said more than 12,000 people were injured. The magnitude 7.2 earthquake destroyed more than 7,000 homes and damaged more than 12,000, leaving about 30,000 families homeless, officials said. Schools, offices and churches also were demolished or badly damaged.

The U.S. Geological Survey said a preliminar­y analysis of satellite imagery after the earthquake revealed hundreds of landslides.

Tensions were growing Wednesday over the slow pace of aid efforts. At the airport in the southwest city of Les Cayes, one of the hardesthit areas, throngs of people gathered outside the fence at the terminal after an aid flight arrived and crews began loading boxes into waiting trucks. One of the members of a Haitian national police squad on hand to guard the shipments fired two warning shots to disperse a group of young men.

Angry crowds also massed at collapsed buildings in the city, demanding tarps to create temporary shelters that were needed more than ever after Tropical Storm Grace brought heavy rain on Monday and Tuesday.

One of the first food deliveries by local authoritie­s — a couple dozen boxes of rice and pre-measured bagged meal kits — reached a tent encampment set up in one of the poorest areas of Les Cayes, where most of the warren’s one-story cinderbloc­k tin-roofed homes were damaged or destroyed by Saturday’s quake.

But the shipment was clearly insufficie­nt for the hundreds who have lived under tents and tarps for five days.

“It’s not enough, but we’ll do everything we can to make sure everybody gets at least something,” said Vladimir Martino, a resident of the camp who took charge of the precious cargo for distributi­on.

Gerda Francoise, 24, was one of dozens who lined up in the wilting heat in hopes of receiving food. “I don’t know what I’m going to get, but I need something to take back to my tent,” said Ms. Francoise. “I have a child.”

The quake wiped out many of the sources of food and income that many of the poor depend on for survival in Haiti, which is already struggling with the coronaviru­s, gang violence and the July 7 assassinat­ion of President Jovenel Moïse.

“We don’t have anything. Even the [farm] animals are gone. They were killed by the rockslides,” said Elize Civil, 30, a farmer in the village of Fleurant, near the quake’s epicenter.

Mr. Civil’s village and many of those in the Nippes province depend on livestock such as goats, cows and chickens for much of their income, said Christy Delafield, who works with the U.S.-based relief organizati­on Mercy Corps. The group is considerin­g cash distributi­ons to allow residents to continue buying local products from small local businesses that are vital to their communitie­s.

Large-scale aid has not yet reached many areas, and one dilemma for donors is that pouring huge amounts of staple foods purchased abroad could, in the long run, hurt local producers.

“We don’t want to flood the area with a lot of products coming in from off the island,” Ms. Delafield said. She said aid efforts must also take a longer view for areas like Nippes, which has been hit in recent years by ever-stronger cyclical droughts and soil erosion. Support for adapting farming practices to the new climate reality — with less reliable rainfall and more tropical storms — is vital, she said.

Etzer Emile, a Haitian economist and professor at Quisqueya University, a private institutio­n in the capital of Port-au-Prince, said the disaster will increase Haitians’ dependence on remittance­s from abroad and assistance from internatio­nal nongovernm­ental groups.

“Foreign aid unfortunat­ely never helps in the long term,” he said. “The southwest needs instead activities that can boost economic capacity for jobs and better social conditions.”

One of the country’s most immediate needs now is medical equipment.

“The hospitals are all broken and collapsed, the operating rooms aren’t functional, and then if you bring tents, it’s hurricane season, they can blow right away,” said Dr. Barth Green, president and co-founder of Project Medishare, an organizati­on that has worked in Haiti since 1994 to improve health services.

U.S. Coast Guard helicopter crews concentrat­ed on the most urgent task, ferrying the injured to less-stressed medical facilities. A U.S. Navy amphibious warship, the USS Arlington, was expected to head for Haiti on Wednesday with a surgical team and landing craft.

Dr. Green noted that his organizati­on has “hundreds of medical volunteers, but the Haitian government tells us they don’t need them.”

He said Project Medishare was deploying nonetheles­s, along with other organizati­ons. He sensed caution on the part of the government after bad experience­s with aid after previous disasters.

 ?? Joseph Odelyn/Associated Press ?? People stand next to the coffin that contains the remains of Francois Elmay, whose body was recovered from the rubble of a home destroyed by Saturday’s 7.2 magnitude earthquake, on Wednesday in Les Cayes, Haiti.
Joseph Odelyn/Associated Press People stand next to the coffin that contains the remains of Francois Elmay, whose body was recovered from the rubble of a home destroyed by Saturday’s 7.2 magnitude earthquake, on Wednesday in Les Cayes, Haiti.

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