‘Bloodied’ Haiti and donors look at recovery plans

Appealing for long-term support from foreign donors meeting in Montreal, Canada, Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive told them his people had been “bloodied, martyred and ruined” by the Jan. 12 quake that killed up to 200,000 and left hundreds of thousands more Haitians injured and homeless.

Bellerive thanked the world community for its help so far, but said “more and more and more” was needed to rebuild a fragile Caribbean state that even before the quake was the poorest in the Western Hemisphere.

“What we’re looking for is a long-term commitment … At least five to 10 years,” he said.

As the huge relief operation for Haiti turned from rescue to recovery, authorities were trying to relocate at least 400,000 survivors — now sheltering in more than 400 sprawling makeshift camps across Port-au-Prince — in temporary tent villages outside the wrecked city.

“We have to evacuate the streets and relocate the people,” Communications Minister Marie Laurence Jocelyn Lassegue said. “We hope we will be able to start at the end of the week.”

Health Minister Alex Larsen said 1 million Haitians had been displaced from their homes in the Port-au-Prince area. The government had tents for 400,000 to be used in the new, temporary settlements, but would need more.

Bellerive said President Rene Preval had called him to ask donors for an additional 200,000 tents. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner and representatives of 10 other countries attended the Montreal donors’ meeting.

The group decided to hold an international pledging conference at UN headquarters in New York in March.

“We actually think it’s a novel idea to do the needs assessment first, and then the planning, and then the pledging,” Clinton said at a closing news conference.

Almost daily aftershocks have shaken Port-au-Prince since the quake, raising the possibility the city might have to be rebuilt on a safer location, away from geological fault lines.

“In 30 seconds, Haiti lost 60 percent of its GDP,” Bellerive said, referring to the concentration of commerce and people in the capital. “So we must decentralize.”

Nearly two weeks after the magnitude-7.0 quake demolished swaths of Port-au-Prince and other cities, the huge US-led international relief operation is struggling to feed, house and care for hundreds of thousands of hungry, homeless survivors, many of them injured.

Facing persistent complaints by desperate survivors that tons of aid flown in was not reaching them on the ground, US troops, UN peacekeepers and aid workers have widened and intensified the distribution of food and water.

Some of the food handouts in the capital have turned unruly, forcing UN peacekeepers and Haitian police to fire shots in the air to restore order.

At a tent camp outside the wrecked presidential palace yesterday, desperate Haitians pushed through a cordon of Uruguayan UN peacekeepers to grab at sacks of beans on a truck.

The UN troops fired riot-control shotguns into the air and sprayed Mace from canisters before they eventually dumped the sacks on the ground and let the Haitians jostle for them.

In the debris-strewn streets of Port-au-Prince, US Army troops travelling in Humvees fanned out carrying doctors, food and water to some of the survivors’ camps.

At the Saint Louis high school, where refugees camped out in makeshift tents and huts, US medics attended long lines of injured Haitians, many of them children.

“We’re driving around, letting people know we’re here to help. We’ve treated 200 people today,” said Lieutenant Larry West of the US 82nd Airborne.

At Titayen, on a plain about six miles (10 km) north of the capital, trucks were still arriving daily bringing bodies for burial in a mass grave.

Canadian Foreign Minister Lawrence Cannon told the Montreal meeting that donors stood ready to help, but basic questions about the recovery strategy first needed be thrashed out.

“There’s the question, for example, of whether we’ll rebuild on the present site of Port-au-Prince,” Cannon told CBC television, citing the threat of future quakes.

Haitian authorities said last week they initially planned to move, with the aid of foreign partners, a first wave of 100,000 survivors to tent villages of 10,000 each at Croix Des Bouquets, just northeast of Port-au-Prince.