Maybe the new administration will address the plight of Haiti. From IPS, via Tierramérica: The worst natural disaster that
Haiti has suffered requires far-reaching solutions in order to reduce this
Caribbean country's environmental fragility, say officials and humanitarian workers. Four major storms pounded
Haiti in August and September, leaving nearly 1,000 dead and a million people homeless. International relief efforts are keeping people alive and sheltered, but the already degraded landscape has been badly battered, washing away crops, soil and the few remaining trees in many areas.
"I'm not sure if things could get worse here. Haiti must be the most desperate environmental crisis on the planet," Joel Boutroue, resident humanitarian coordinator and head of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) in Port-au-Prince, told Tierramérica. Boutroue was referring to the future of the poorest country in the Americas, where U.N. peace-keepers have been stationed since 2004. But he added that "the international response to the disaster is quite good."
While pockets of severe malnutrition still exist, there is access to clean water and only about 3,000 families were without shelter as of the end of October, he said. However, it is not possible to feed an entire country of 9.5 million people with international aid for long. Haiti cannot feed itself, and even growing 50 percent of its own food is years away, Boutroue fears….
A taptap (shared taxi) in central Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Shot by Doron, Wikimedia Commons, under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2
No comments:
Post a Comment