āNothing! Nothing! Weāve seen nothing!ā, chanted a crowd of internally displaced people (IDP) on October 6. They were pursuing former US president Bill Clinton from his photo-op in their squalid camp on his way to the third Interim Haiti Reconstruction Commission (IHRC) meeting in downtown Port-au-Prince.
The crowd protesting against Clinton was from an IDP camp on the golf-course of the former Petionville Club, a bourgeois enclave created by US Marines when they first occupied Haiti from 1915 to 1934.
Ironically, the camp is considered one of the capitalās best, thanks to the attention brought to it by actor Sean Penn.
The same chants came from another demonstration of about 200 IDPs on October 12 in front of Prime Minister Jean-Max Belleriveās offices, where the IHRC is based. At that action, exactly nine months after Haitiās devastating earthquake, protesters delivered a letter demanding respect for their constitutionally guaranteed right to housing, a moratorium on forced expulsions, and an end to the āmasquerade aidā of NGOs.
The IHRC, co-chaired by Clinton and Bellerive, is the body that decides how to spend money donated to rebuild Haiti after the January 12 quake. Octoberās meeting took place by teleconference, and journalists were invited to follow it by calling a US-based number.
This immediately excluded any Haitian who could not afford the three-hour international call.
Some journalists crowded into the PMās press room to listen to the meeting over a small pod-like speaker that looked like an oversized video game joystick. The teleconferenceās sound quality was poor, static-filled and at times unintelligible.
I was sitting closest to the speaker and craning to make out what was being said, but I couldnāt follow much of it.
All seven of the foreign white journalists in the room were seated around the conference table where the mini-speaker sat, but only three of about 20 Haitians present. The other Haitians were seated in chairs along the walls of the room, out of earshot of the muffled voices deciding their countryās fate.
As if to underscore this irony, most of the conference was conducted in English. French statements were translated into English, but not vice versa.
Nothing was presented in or translated into Kreyol, the national language, making it even harder for Haitians to know where all the millions are going.
The whole exercise seemed amateurish. The conference call plodded along, casual and faltering.
None of the IHRC board seemed too bothered by the frequent interruptions and confusion. It was as if voting on the investment of millions and Haitiās fate was just a banal hobby.
Reginald Boulos, an industrialist from one of Haitiās most powerful capitalist families and a staunch backer of the 2004 coup dāetat against President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, insisted meetings should begin with a progress update on projects to ensure transparency and accountability.
This implied even IHRC board members have little information on the whereabouts of previously approved money. Boulosās minor reservations and criticisms were later trumpeted by Clinton as āfierce debate and vigorous participation on the part of the Haitian members of the boardā ā representing the Haitian peopleās interests, of course.
The session took place during Haitiās āback-to-schoolā week, and at the press conference later Clinton claimed 80% of children who were in school before the quake are now back in class.
It was unclear how he obtained such a figure only two days into the new term, especially since many schools didnāt resume class until the following week.
At its last meeting in August, the IHRC approved US$94 million to get schools ready for the new academic year, a much needed investment. Haiti ranks alongside Somalia and Eritrea as one of the worst places on the planet to be a schoolchild.
Only half of Haitiās children attended (mostly private) schools before the quake destroyed about 90% of those.
Only $26 million of the $94 million has appeared. There are fewer kids in class than ever, and Haitiās education ministry says it still hasnāt seen any of the money.
There were also inconsistencies between the projects presented in the IHRC meeting and the press release given to journalists afterwards. The press release said UNICEF gave $100 million to āsupport the Haitian government and civil society in the fight against gender-based violenceā.
But in the meeting, there was no mention of the UNICEF money, only concerns that a $10.6 million UN population fund for women and girlsā āgender equality impact is not yet approvedā, said one of the board members.
It is unclear where UNICEFās $100 million has gone. Merina Zuluanie of Women Victims Stand Up (Favilek), a grassroots organisation that has been providing medical, legal and moral support for women and children victims of sexual abuse and violence for more than 15 years, said her group has not received any IHRC or UNICEF funding.
I spoke with Malia Villard Appolon, the coordinator of Commission of Women Victims for Victims (Kofaviv), a coalition of raped women.
Kofaviv members have taken charge of their own security in camps, organising escorts to protect women going to the toilets, handing out whistles to women at risk, raising awareness and organising groups of men to take shifts patrolling their areas.
Before the quake, Kofaviv had an office with a clinic, doctor, nurse, psychologist, laboratory and everything in place to help rape victims. That was all destroyed on January 12 but since then, Appolon said, āwe have received nothing from UNICEFā.
Meanwhile, Dr Claude Surena, the head of the Haitian Medical Association, and regional health director, said he has an 18-month strategy to get the health sector back on its feet, but they canāt move ahead with anything until donor funds arrive.
The IHRC website said $17 million was approved and funded on August 17. But Haitiās General Hospital in downtown Port-au-Prince looks much as it did in the quakeās aftermath: hallways and pharmacies are still full of rubble; people wait outside for treatment; operations are conducted in tents; the pediatrics unit is still damaged beyond repair.
So why is the place still a shambles?
āI think weāre making progress with the road reconstruction and agriculture sectorsā, said Clinton, without going into specifics. The IHRC website said $464.8 million of road construction and rehabilitation projects were funded in August.
The site said $211.3 million of the $240.3 million earmarked for agriculture has been funded and $200 million was going to a techno-jargon-obscured project to āincrease farm income in targeted areas and reduce expected losses in infrastructure by improving agricultural value chains, agriculture intensification, technology adoption among small farmers, and land tenure regularisationā.
In contrast, the Food and Agriculture Organisationās more down-to-earth $29 million project to āsupport 1) food crop production 2) local seed production, 3) urban and suburban agriculture, 4) creation of jobs in the livestock sector, 5) fisheries, and 6) local response capacity to hurricanesā has received no funding.
Clinton has not lobbied for reversal of the neoliberal trade policies his administration pushed when he was US president, despite him verbally renouncing them in March. These policies decimated Haitiās rice crops by flooding the market with heavily subsidised Arkansas rice.
Imported food still dominates any Haitian market one visits.
Capitalists on the IHRC have funded themselves with $24.5 million of $35 million over five years to āestablish a partial credit guarantee fund for enterprise developmentā, the IHRC site says.
Meanwhile, the same IHRC board has released none of the $65 million earmarked over the next 12 months for ājob creationā to ācreate 300,000 temporary jobs across the country, focusing on populations touched by the earthquakeā.
The project to āassess public buildings in the 10 departmentsā, just $1 million over five months, has also not been funded. Only $13.4 million has been provided for housing, Haitiās most critical need.
When asked āwhat of the IHRC funding is being given to help people in the campsā at the post-meeting press conference, Clinton interrupted the journalist, dodged the question and spoke of the need to implement a mortgage system.
This reveals why Clinton heads the IHRC. His priorities are to facilitate banks providing mortgages, capitalists finding credit, and businesses having roads to bus in their workers and ship out their sweatshop-assembled garments and electronics.
Job-creation and housing for Haitiās 1.5 million homeless suffering in squalid camps will just have to wait.
[Isabeau Doucet is a freelance journalist and works with the Office of International Lawyers in Port au Prince, Haiti. This article is reprinted from HaitiLiberte.com.] http://www.haitiliberte.com/
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