Aim of UN donors meeting: $3.8 billion to rebuild a better Haiti

The UN and the US are co-hosting a high-level donors’ meeting on post-earthquake Haiti. The goal is to secure $3.8 billion in international pledges for a decade-long recovery program.

UN Donors Conference Haiti
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton speak at a breakfast before the International Donors’ Conference meeting towards a ‘New Future for Haiti’ at the United Nations Headquarters, in New York, Wednesday.
(Chip East/Reuters)


By Howard LaFranchi, Staff writer
posted March 31, 2010 at 9:45 am EDT

United Nations, N.Y. —

The global spotlight that focused on Haiti’s monumental rescue and stabilization efforts in the weeks after the devastating Jan. 12 earthquake turns back to the Caribbean nation Wednesday.

This time, the international community seeks to finance and fashion a multibillion-dollar reconstruction program that doesn’t just repair the weak and impoverished country but uses the opportunity to build a better Haiti.

The United States and the United Nations are co-hosting a high-level donors’ conference that US officials say will draw more than 100 countries and international development organizations. The goal is to secure an initial $3.8 billion in international pledges for a decade-long recovery program the Haitian government estimates at $14 billion.

IN PICTURES: Rebuilding after an earthquake

The international community will express a common spirit of support for Haiti in opening remarks to be offered by leaders including Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, and his special envoy for Haiti Bill Clinton. Haitian President René Préval will outline his government’s plan for national renewal.

What role for whom?

But several contentious issues will have to be addressed if Haiti’s massive reconstruction effort is to be a success: Is the international community turning too quickly to visions of rebuilding what is virtually a failed state, when the immediate relief needs of millions of Haitian people are unmet? Is it wise to expect the Haitian government to take charge of the rebuilding effort, given that its weaknesses were only compounded by a natural disaster? And is the US taking too dominant a role in the rebuilding program?

“This is not a traditional donors’ conference; this goes far beyond simply rebuilding the physical structures destroyed by an earthquake,” says Francois Pierre-Louis, a political scientist and Haiti expert at Queens College in Flushing, N.Y. This one-day conference is about building the tangible (physical infrastructure) and the intangible (such as governance), he says, “and it may be too ambitious to do both at once.”

Some international development experts and US officials cite the reconstruction of Aceh in Indonesia after the 2004 tsunami as an example of how rebuilding can be done successfully – and they say the international community can apply the lessons it learned in Aceh to Haiti. But others say the Haiti reconstruction will be more daunting, in part because an already-ineffectual nation was decimated by the disaster.

“It’s going to be a challenge. I don’t think anyone thinks it’s not going to be a challenge, and the government of Haiti thinks it’s going to be a challenge,” says Cheryl Mills, Secretary Clinton’s special counselor on Haiti. She notes, for starters, that 28 of Haiti’s 29 ministry buildings collapsed.

A commission to oversee the plan

The government’s weak starting point post-quake is one reason a provisional development commission is being set up. With eight of its 13 members from outside Haiti, the commission will oversee implementation of the renewal plan – and in particular the disbursement of the mountains of international funding.

Some Haitians have taken that aspect of the development plan as a slap in the face, but Ms. Mills dismisses criticisms and says the commission’s make-up reflects both aspirations and realities on the ground.

“President Préval has been very clear that they need to be in the lead,” she says, “but he also recognizes that their capacities are considerably diminished.”

Queens College’s Mr. Pierre-Louis, a Haitian-American, says governance and the rule of law will be key factors determining progress in Haiti. “How are you going to reform the state so that money gets out of Port-au-Prince” to the poor and underdeveloped provinces? “Who’s going to make sure the money isn’t wasted and stolen?”

Haiti lost more than 100,000 houses in the earthquake, and replacing that lost housing will be a top challenge to the government and to the plan for a “better” Haiti, Pierre-Louis adds. “Who’s going to have the authority to tell a Haitian man or a Haitian woman not to rebuild his or her house the way it was before?”

Speed is of the essence

While international officials place an emphasis on getting Haiti’s plan right, some Haitians say it’s also going to be important to act fast if key parts of the plan are to have any chance.

For example, Mr. Préval wants to use the exodus of perhaps 300,000 families from Port-au-Prince after the quake as a starting point for decentralizing the country, revitalizing agriculture, and decongesting an overcrowded capital.

But Pierre-Louis says Haitians who left an impoverished and poorly serviced countryside once won’t have much faith that dreamy plans for robust agriculture and dynamic secondary cities will ever materialize.

“People who left are already returning to Port-au-Prince,” he says, “Relief aid never got to them in the rural areas, so they don’t believe it will be any different when it comes to rebuilding the country.”

Voodooists honor victims of Haiti’s earthquake

By MIKE MELIA
Associated Press Writer
Hundreds of Voodoo practitioners chanted, prayed and pounded drums Sunday to honor earthquake victims in an unusually public ceremony for a religion most often celebrated in private homes.

The white-clad Voodooists, many with black sashes around their arms, walked under the scorching Caribbean sun from a downtown plaza to the shoreline, where they asked for the spirits of the dead to be cleansed in the ocean and sent on their way to reincarnation.

“Without us, there is no Haiti,” said Voodoo priest Jean Claude Bazil, claiming his religion as the country’s true path. “We have to pull ourselves together to save Haiti.”

The Jan. 12 earthquake, which killed a government-estimated 230,000 people, roused tensions among Haiti’s religions as some of the outpouring of aid has been funneled through Christian groups. A ceremony in a seaside slum last month was disrupted by angry crowds that threw rocks at Voodoo practitioners.

Organizers of Sunday’s memorial chose a location amid the rubble of the shattered city center and promoted the event with radio advertisements in an effort to increase acceptance of Voodoo, which was sanctioned as an official religion in 2003 by the Haitian government. Haitian National Police kept a close watch from pickup trucks, but there was no violence — only prayers.

“Voodoo is not a secret society,” said Max Beauvoir, a Voodoo priest who wore a feathered cap and a string of brightly colored beads as he presided over the ceremony at the United Nations park.

Still, the crowd of a few hundred people filled only a small patch of the park, nowhere near the size of the masses that turned out for Christian memorials during three days of official mourning in February.

Voodoo, a blend of Christian tenets and African religions fused by slaves, is practiced across the nation of roughly 9 million people. Many Haitians consider themselves followers of both Voodoo and Christianity.

Voodoo followers believe in reincarnation, one God and a pantheon of spirits. Voodoo leaders say that although they do not believe in evil spirits, some followers pray for the spirits to do evil.

One Voodoo priest, Augustine Saint-Clou, said they were praying for all the earthquake victims although he does not believe other religions have shown the same consideration for Voodooists.

“This is the real religion for all Haitians,” said Saint-Clou, who wore a skull pendant on a chain around his neck.

A youth attends a Voodoo ceremony in honor of the victims of the earthquake in Port-au-Prince, Sunday, March 28, 2010. A 7.0-magnitude earthquake hit Haiti on Jan. 12, killing and injuring thousands and leaving more than a million people living in makeshift camps. (AP Photo/Jorge Saenz)

A woman kisses the feet of Voodoo leader Max Beauvoir during ceremony in honor of the victims of the earthquake in Port-au-Prince, Sunday, March 28, 2010. A 7.0-magnitude earthquake hit Haiti on Jan. 12, killing and injuring thousands and leaving more than a million people living in makeshift camps. (AP Photo/Jorge Saenz)

People attend a Voodoo ceremony in honor of the victims of the earthquake in Port-au-Prince, Sunday, March 28, 2010. A 7.0-magnitude earthquake hit Haiti on Jan. 12, killing and injuring thousands and leaving more than a million people living in makeshift camps. (AP Photo/Jorge Saenz)

Wyclef Jean, Lang Lang Join Forces in Concert for Haitian Kids

By Patrick Cole

earthquake Haiti March 18 (Bloomberg) — After a massive rocked in January, concert pianist Lang Lang sent a text message to Wyclef Jean asking if the singer’s friends and relatives in the Caribbean country were safe.
The Chinese superstar and the Haitian-born hip-hop artist who rose to fame with the Fugees had met a month earlier in Oslo at a concert honoring U.S. President Barack Obama for winning the Nobel Peace Prize.
“After the Haiti earthquake, Wyclef told me that some of his friends are dead,” Lang Lang, 27, said last week on the phone from Germany, where he was performing. “It was very emotional for us and for the Chinese people because China had an extremely large earthquake two years ago.”
On Sunday they will reunite at New York’s Carnegie Hall to raise money for the U.S. Fund for UNICEF. Organizers of the event, partly sponsored by luxury goods maker Montblanc North America LLC, say proceeds will benefit Haiti’s children.
Lang Lang will perform with Germany’s Schleswig-Holstein Festival Orchestra, an ensemble comprising some of the world’s finest classical musicians who are 26 or younger. Christoph Eschenbach, who conducted Lang Lang’s jaw-dropping Ravinia Festival debut in 1999, will direct the program of works by Mozart, Prokofiev and Beethoven.
‘Gunpowder’ Reprise
Then Jean, 37, will come onstage with Lang Lang to reprise the duet of Jean’s “Gunpowder” that they performed in Oslo. The song begins with a tragic narrative about the killing of a brother:
I asked my mother why do you cry?
She said your brother, he just died
Well I told him not to go outside
He said he had to fight for his country’s rights
Lang Lang, known for blazing through Tchaikovsky, said his collaboration with a hip-hop singer wouldn’t surprise fans who know his musical tastes. The 3,000 songs on his Sony digital music player include hits by Jay-Z, Usher, Eminem and Kanye West, as well as Jean.
“I always enjoy listening to hip hop and to Wyclef, and I really respect him even though we’re walking in two different musical worlds,” he said. “I remember when we were backstage in Oslo, he showed me the chords on the guitar for the song. He’s a great composer.”
Red Steinway
Charity work has been a part of Lang Lang’s frenetic schedule since he became an international goodwill ambassador to UNICEF in 2004. In 2008, he auctioned the red Steinway piano he’d used for a Central Park concert and donated the proceeds to the American Red Cross China Earthquake fund. That year, he also launched the Lang Lang International Music Foundation Inc., which gives scholarships to young music students.
Lang Lang will appear tomorrow at the Apple Store on Manhattan’s Upper West Side, where he’ll perform Chopin’s “Polonaise in A Flat major, Opus 53.” The piece was released this week on iTunes, and the pianist will donate the proceeds to UNICEF.
“Haiti confirmed that it’s important for musicians who are lucky to support children who aren’t so lucky,” he said.
Lang Lang will perform tomorrow at 3 p.m. at the Apple Store, 1981 Broadway. Admission is free. He will perform with Wyclef Jean and the Schleswig-Holstein orchestra on March 21, 8:30 p.m., at Carnegie Hall, 57th Street and Seventh Avenue. Tickets cost $36 to $109. Information: +1-212-247-7800.
To contact the writer on this story: Patrick Cole in New York at pcole3@bloomberg.net.

Women, girls rape victims in Haiti quake aftermath


By MICHELLE FAUL
The Associated Press
Tuesday, March 16, 2010; 8:43 PM 


PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — When the young woman needed to use the toilet, she went out into the darkened tent camp and was attacked by three men.
“They grabbed me, put their hands over my mouth and then the three of them took turns,” the slender 21-year-old said, wriggling with discomfort as she nursed her baby girl, born three days before Haiti’s devastating quake.
“I am so ashamed. We’re scared people will find out and shun us,” said the woman, who suffers from abdominal pain and itching, likely from an infection contracted during the attack.
Women and children as young as 2, already traumatized by the loss of homes and loved ones in the Jan. 12 catastrophe, are now falling victim to rapists in the sprawling tent cities that have become home to hundreds of thousands of people.
With no lighting and no security, they are menacing places after sunset. Sexual assaults are daily occurrences in the biggest camps, aid workers say – and most attacks go unreported because of the shame, social stigma and fear of reprisals from attackers.
Rape Haiti was a big problem in even before the earthquake and frequently was used as a political weapon in times of upheaval. Both times the first democratically elected president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, was ousted, his enemies assassinated his male supporters and raped their wives and daughters.
But the quake that killed an estimated 200,000 people has made women and girls ever more vulnerable. They have lost their homes and are forced to sleep in flimsy tents or tarp-covered lean-tos. They’ve lost male protection with the deaths of husbands, brothers and sons. And they are living in close quarters with strangers.
The 21-year-old said her family has received no food aid because the Haitian men handing out coupons for food distribution demand sexual favors.
Sex-for-food is not uncommon in the camps, said a report issued Tuesday by the Interuniversity Institute for Research and Development in Haiti. “In particular, young girls have to negotiate sexually in order to get shelter from the rains and access to food aid.”

At the camp on Monday where the young mother was gang-raped, a woman in shorts tried to bathe discreetly. Stripped to her waist, she faced her blue tarp tent, her back to the rows of other shelters.
Nearby, a teenage girl squatted behind a pile of garbage, trying to avoid the stench and clouds of flies around tarp-covered latrines that provide the only privacy, but also are places where women are attacked.
In this camp, some 47,000 people live crowded into what used to be a sports ground in a neighborhood that always has been dangerous. Residents include a dozen escaped prisoners, among them a man accused of a notorious murder, according to Fritznel Pierre, a human rights advocate who lives at the camp.
“But nobody says anything because they’re scared, scared of the criminals and scared of the police,” he said.
Pierre has documented three other gang rapes in the camp, including of a 17-year-old who says she was a virgin before six men attacked her and raped her repeatedly.
“I really worry about the teenager because she has no one to look out for her. She says she sees her attackers but is afraid to report them because she would then have to leave the camp and she has nowhere to go,” Pierre said.
Investigators for Human Rights Watch reported the first three gang rapes to U.N. officials. Then, two weeks later, on Feb. 27, the 21-year-old mother was gang-raped.
Only a week later did U.N. police officers begin patrolling.
“For me it seems completely bizarre that for this one camp that everyone knows is unsafe, it’s taken them three weeks to get a patrol going,” said Liesl Gerntholtz, executive director of the agency’s women’s rights division. “It’s unrealistic to expect patrols in camps all the time, but I think they can identify hotspots and provide security to those spots.”
Pierre complained that the U.N. patrols are ineffective. “They only drive their cars down the one road that covers only a small portion of the camp. They never get out of their cars,” he said.
In the hilltop suburb of Petionville, where plush mansions look out over slums on hillsides and in ravines, a 7-year-old rape victim was being treated Monday in the hospital of a tent camp set up on a golf course. Another child, a 2-year-old, had been raped in the same camp two weeks earlier.
The toddler is taking antibiotics for a gonorrhea infection of the mouth, according to Alison Thompson, who is the volunteer medical coordinator for a Haitian relief group created by Sean Penn. She helped treat both children.
“Women aren’t being protected,” Thompson said. “So when the lights go down is when the rapes increase, and it’s happening daily in all the camps in Port-au-Prince.”
Besides sexually transmitted diseases and pregnancy, victims face possible HIV infection. Haiti has the highest infection rate for the virus that causes AIDS in the Western hemisphere, with one in 50 people infected.
Among the many rape victims is an 18-year-old girl who lost her parents, grandmother, a sister and three cousins to the quake. She was roaming the streets distraught when a man approached her, promising her his wife would look after her, she said.
The middle-aged man took her to a house, then left and came back with two men. The three raped her repeatedly until she managed to escape.
The teen is among dozens of rape victims who have sought help from KOFAVIV, a group of Haitian women who survived political rapes in 2004. Their offices were destroyed in the quake and they now operate from a tent.
They brought the victims to American volunteer lawyers who came to Port-au-Prince a week ago to identify Haitians who may qualify for humanitarian parole to live in the United States.
“I’ve been here five days and have spoken to 30 (rape) survivors including a dozen under 18. Their stories are horrific. I would be catatonic,” said San Francisco lawyer Jayne Fleming.
Few rapes are reported because women often face humiliating scrutiny from police officers who suggest they invited the attacks and even nurses who contend young girls were “too hot” in their dress style, according to Delva Marie Eramithe, a KOFAVIV leader.
Her own 18-year-old daughter was saved from an attacker who dragged the girl into a dark alley between tents at the downtown camp sprawling across Champs de Mars plaza. The assailant did not see the teen’s three sisters, who had been walking behind her, and all four of them managed to beat him and run him off.
Soon after, he returned to their tent with three other men and a gun, Eramithe said.
While a male neighbor argued with the men, Eramithe and her daughters went to a nearby police station to report the attempted rape.
“We told them the man who attacked her was right there at our tent, just two blocks away,” Eramithe said. “But one policeman said they had received reports of nothing but raping, thefts and domestic beatings all day and there’s nothing they can do. The other police officer said the only person who can do anything is President (Rene) Preval.”
When she insisted, they gave her the license plate of a police van patrolling the camp perimeter. Eventually she found the patrol car but that officer “told us to go and get the attacker and bring him to them.”
Police spokesman Gary Desrosiers said only 24 rapes have been reported to Haitian authorities this year. Several suspects were detained, but many escaped when prisons collapsed in the quake, he said.
Police Chief Mario Andresol blamed the attacks on the more than 7,000 prisoners who escaped. “Bandits are taking advantage to harass and rape women and young girls under the tents,” he told reporters two weeks after the quake.
“We are aware of problem … but it’s not a priority,” Information Minister Marie-Laurence Jocelyn Lassegue said last month.
Haitian police officers with stations minutes from some of the largest camps do not patrol – a fact that spokesman Desrosiers blames on the loss of dozens of officers killed in the quake, as well as scores who remain missing and more than 250 who were injured.
Still, that leaves some 9,600 Haitian police officers and 2,000 U.N. police officers.
The first signs of action came when U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon arrived Sunday, and a contingent of female U.N. and Haitian police officers set up a tent at the camp.
Ban promised the camps will be “safe and secure.”
He praised the security offered by Haitian and U.N. police and told the women officers: “We must protect these women and girls. … If they are sexually abused and attacked and raped, that is totally unacceptable and intolerable, and we must stop it.”
On Monday, a man with a bullhorn was at the camp during a food distribution, saying “We don’t want men raping women, do we?”
No, the women waiting in line yelled back.
Still, the fear was palpable among the most vulnerable. The 18-year-old orphaned rape victim was nervous about the time, even though it was only mid-afternoon.
“I have to find somewhere to sleep, near some people who might help me if there’s trouble,” she said.
“It scares me, the way the men look at me, and they know I’m all alone.”

Associated Press Television News reporter Pierre Richard Luxama contributed to this report.

U.N. chief urges donors not to forget Haiti

Port-au-Prince, Haiti (CNN) — U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has promised Haitians he is focused on maintaining donor solidarity as the quake-torn nation struggles to rebuild, the organization said.
The effort will include an international donors’ conference at the United Nations headquarters in New York on March 31, Ban said, according to a Sunday news release.
Providing shelter to displaced people, sanitation and reconstruction remain top priorities, Ban said during his second visit to the country since a massive earthquake struck January 12.
“We have provided at least 700,000 people with tents, tarpaulins and plastic sheeting,” he said. “This however is not enough, as it covers just 60 percent of the 1.3 million displaced persons.”
The nation also needs funds for schools, infrastructure, roads and power, among other things, he said.
“For the foreseeable future, the government will need international assistance simply to cover its payroll — teachers, police, doctors and nurses, civil servants and basic services,” Ban said.
More than 200,000 people died in the 7.0-magnitude earthquake, and large portions of the capital city were destroyed.
The U.N. chief lauded international efforts to provide support. He assured Haitian President René Préval’s administration that he will also work to fulfill the needs of underfunded programs such as early recovery and agriculture.
But maintaining solidarity after the donors’ conference and beyond is a challenge, he said, and so is the situation on the ground.

“We will continue to expedite this process before the rainy season and the hurricane season arrive,” he said. “We are a little behind schedule, but any fully effective coordination to provide humanitarian assistance to such a large number of displaced persons has always been a great challenge.”

For Haitian, Mission Is to Mend Fences With Diaspora and Streamline Aid

Alex Welsh for The New York Times
Edwin Paraison, right, meets with Haitian-Americans United for Progress in Queens to discuss Haitian-Americans’ contributions to the country’s recovery.

His mission is arguably one of the most important facing the Haitian government: reach out to members of Haiti’s global diaspora, estimated at two million people, and harness their newly urgent desire to help their country. Yet Edwin Paraison, Haiti’s minister of Haitians living abroad, is quick to acknowledge that he was handicapped even before he started.

Mr. Paraison’s ministry has 75 employees. Two died in the earthquake on Jan. 12, and 60 are homeless. His headquarters are now rubble. This week, he visited Boston, Miami, Montreal and New York — among the largest centers of Haitians living overseas — for the first time since the disaster.
Why not sooner? Because, said his chief of staff, Jean-Robert Vaval, the government would not buy him a plane ticket. With money scarce, other emergency trips by other officials — to appeal for international aid, for instance — took precedence.
That logistical hiccup in some ways reflects a larger and more longstanding confusion and frustration felt between those in need in Haiti and those uniquely eager to help. Mr. Paraison, a dapper, soft-spoken Episcopal priest, tried gamely to address those issues as he moved through New York in recent days.
Everywhere he went, Haitian-Americans packed the rooms, eager to meet him, yet skeptical that he could deliver. He has been in office only a few months, and his predecessors, by all accounts, made little headway toward mending the relations between the Haitian diaspora and the homeland.
“A lot of people have no idea what my ministry does,” Mr. Paraison admitted to about 100 Haitian community leaders who gathered on Monday to try to improve and streamline the Haitian-American response to the earthquake.
Haitians abroad contribute from $1 billion to $2 billion annually to Haiti, but they cannot vote, a legacy of political chaos and successive governments that did not want to give influence to opponents who had fled the country. Haitian-Americans complain of being told they are “not really Haitian,” and they sometimes find the country corrupt and disorganized. Some in Haiti see their American brethren as arrogant and demanding.
Mr. Paraison tried to do what he could. Diaspora groups, he said with admiration, responded no less quickly than international relief agencies, though they have far fewer resources. He estimated that 1,400 Haitian professionals — doctors, nurses, engineers — traveled to the country in the first six weeks, and those were only the ones the government knew about.
That was exactly what the crowd had come to discuss. The dimly lighted hall in Times Square — headquarters of 1199 S.E.I.U. United Healthcare Workers East, the union that represents 350,000 people from Washington to Massachusetts, a fifth of them of Haitian descent — reverberated with sweeping ambition to rebuild Haiti.
And a touch of frustration.
After the earthquake, Haitian-Americans volunteered their services in overwhelming numbers. But many found it difficult to get to Haiti or to figure out how best to help. There are various reasons: Many international relief organizations, while in need of Creole speakers, do not deploy inexperienced volunteers to disaster zones; the many smaller aid groups founded by Haitians abroad lack a unifying organization; and the Haitian government, barely functioning, has offered little help in coordinating would-be volunteers.
Mr. Paraison vowed to restructure the ministry to change that.
The meeting’s ostensible focus was to bite off a small chunk of that problem: how to harness the large number of Haitian medical professionals abroad, not only to provide emergency medical care but also to help overhaul the country’s health care system.
But it was impossible to keep out the broader tensions. One man challenged Mr. Paraison about the voting issue; a woman shushed him, saying it was inappropriate to bring that up when an estimated quarter-million people were dead. But another agreed, saying, “They think of us as a big A.T.M.”
Georges Boursiquot, a Brooklyn real estate agent who declared outside the room that Mr. Paraison’s ministry was a waste of money, demanded: “By the way, where is your office in New York? What is your phone number in New York?”
Mr. Paraison did not provide a New York number, but gave the ministry’s Web site (mhave.gouv.ht) and his personal e-mail address.
The next day, he was philosophical. “An open and authentic dialogue, that’s what is needed,” he said.
His next stop was a tiny room at Haitian-Americans United for Progress, a community group on a stretch of Linden Boulevard in Cambria Heights, Queens, dotted with Haitian salons and groceries.
Crammed in were prominent leaders: Bishop Guy A. Sansaricq of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn; Father Jean-Miguel Auguste, the pastor of St. Jerome, one of the city’s largest Haitian Catholic congregations; and Councilman Leroy G. Comrie Jr. There were also ordinary Haitians like Fabienne Doucet, a New York University assistant professor with a proposal. Dr. Doucet wants to create HaitiCorps, a nonprofit organization, to vet Haitian and non-Haitian professional volunteers and steer them to projects in Haiti that need them.
“That interests me!” the minister declared in French, and they exchanged business cards on the spot.
Elsie St. Louis-Accilien, the director of Haitian-Americans United for Progress, said she hoped it was just the beginning. “You are the first high official to visit us,” she said in French. “Merci, merci, merci.”
But on his way out, Father Auguste said of the minister’s outreach, “Nothing will come of it.”
Members of the diaspora, he said, should unite and “take things into our own hands.” Arrogance will not be a problem, he said. Anyone helping in Haiti has to “sleep on the streets with the people.”

Obama Pledges U.S. Aid to Haiti

WASHINGTON — As the United States military steadily reduces its presence in Haiti, President Obama pledged on Wednesday to remain committed to providing financial assistance and humanitarian relief to help Haitians rebuild and recover from their devastating earthquake two months ago.
“The situation on the ground remains dire and people should be under no illusions that the crisis is over,” Mr. Obama said after meeting with President René Préval of Haiti. With spring rains ahead, he added, “the challenge is now to prevent a second disaster.”
The two leaders stood side by side in a ceremony in the Rose Garden, after a private meeting in the Oval Office, where Mr. Obama received an update on conditions in Haiti. The Navy said the hospital ship Comfort left Haiti on Wednesday for its home port, Baltimore.
Mr. Préval offered his gratitude to the United States for its “massive, spontaneous, generous help” after the earthquake on Jan. 12 that killed more than 230,000 people and left more than one million homeless. He said the tragedy should serve as a warning for the world that the effectiveness of relief efforts “must be improved.”
The Haitian government is devising a long-range reconstruction and development plan before a donors conference set for March 31 at the United Nations. Mr. Préval embraced the need for decentralization and shifting government and private facilities away from the battered capital, Port-au-Prince, and also urged the creation of a team at the United Nations that would be the disaster equivalent of peacekeepers.
The Pentagon said Wednesday that about 10,000 American military service members were still in Haiti, down from the peak of 22,000. About 4,700 are based on land, and 5,300 are on ships. The decreasing presence of the military was not a signal, Mr. Obama said, that the commitment of the United States was easing.
“America’s commitment to Haiti’s recovery and reconstruction must endure and will endure,” he said. “This pledge is one that I made at the beginning of this crisis, and I intend for America to keep our pledge. America will be your partner in the recovery and reconstruction effort.”
The Comfort was among the most visible symbols of aid in Haiti, although it could deal with only the most urgent cases among the countless thousands of Haitians needing medical care. The ship provided the most sophisticated medical care available and treated 871 patients, but Navy officials said that it had not had any patients for more than a week.
“The situation on the ground in terms of the medical situation has improved,” said Jose Ruiz, a civilian spokesman for the United States Southern Command. “Demand for medical care is not exceeding the capacity of facilities on the ground.”
Mr. Ruiz said the duties of the remaining American forces included distributing aid, removing rubble and completing engineering assessments of damaged structures. With the Haitian government and police, as well as United Nations peacekeepers, reasserting control, he said that the American forces were largely in a supporting role.
“As you declared during last month’s national day of mourning, it is time to wipe away the tears,” Mr. Obama said. “It is time for Haiti to rebuild.”
Mr. Obama lingered in the Rose Garden, as the sun poked out of the clouds, to shake hands and sign autographs for members of the search and rescue teams that worked in Haiti. He knelt down to pat a dog from the Los Angeles County Fire Department, whose team also traveled to Haiti after the earthquake.
It remained an open question how much aid the United States would provide in the months ahead. During his visit here, Mr. Préval also met with Congressional leaders from both parties. They are expected to decide upon a new aid package, the size of which is expected to be more than $1 billion.
“The international community can pledge the resources that will be necessary for a coordinated and sustained effort,” Mr. Obama said. “And working together, we can ensure that assistance not simply delivers relief for the short term, but builds up Haiti’s capacity to deliver basic services and provide for the Haitian people over the long term.”

Thom Shanker contributed reporting.
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