Opportunity for Haitian government to make bold decisions
Feb. 2, 2010 -- Organization of American States (OAS) Assistant Secretary General
Albert R. Ramdin, says that the following the massive earthquake in the
Caribbean nation on January 12, every effort will be made to ensure
that “Haiti remains the highest priority within the OAS.
“We
should not forget Haiti. While we recognize their resilience, we should
not leave the Haitians on their own. This is a singular opportunity for
the international community to support Haitians and help Haitians help
themselves,” the Assistant Secretary General said, after returning from
Haiti where he led an inter-American delegation on a one-day visit.
While
in Port-au-Prince, the Assistant Secretary General also invited Haitian
Foreign Minister Marie-Michele Rey to address the OAS Permanent Council
in Washington on the situation and needs of the Caribbean nation that
was ravaged by a 7.0 magnitude earthquake.
“We will remind
member states that have made pledges—very generous pledges—at the
beginning, political commitments, expressed as well as financial
commitments,” Ambassador Ramdin said, following the visit. “We will
remind them of those pledges so that Haiti can count on the OAS as an
advocate for their own needs.”
Ambassador Ramdin renewed the
inter-American support and commitment to helping the recovery and
rebuilding in Haiti, stressing the Organization’s interest in an active
involvement by the Haitian diaspora. He also referred to the
Organization’s interest in mobilizing the hemisphere’s private sector
in a conference to partner with Haitian private sector.
The
delegation that went to Port-au-Prince on Thursday comprised, among
others, the Executive Director of the Pan American Development
Foundation (PADF), David Sanbrailo; Deputy Director of the
Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture (IICA), David
Hatch; and Inter-American Defense Board Director General, Brigadier
General Ancil W. Antoine.
The Haitian Foreign Affairs Minister
described the meeting with the OAS officials as very positive, noting
that “we exchanged views on the next steps of what has to be done.” She
said they also reviewed the emergency and reconstruction phases in
which “coordination is a key factor in helping the people,” in addition
to ensuring that the Haitian view is taken into consideration.
Minister
Rey welcomed the initiative to invite Haitian diaspora to be integrally
involved, explaining that the diaspora, as “our brothers and sisters,
they are suffering as much as we are.” During the one-day visit, the
OAS Delegation also met with Edmond Mulet, head of the United Nations
Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH) and reviewed a series of key
issues.
In his overview of the visit, Ramdin further noted the
enormous devastation he and his delegation witness in the Haitian
capital city, with many fallen buildings and a huge death toll. He
observed the sad and painful reality faced by the people of Haiti, who
have had to continue working, with little time to grieve and to mourn
their loved ones. But he also commended the remarkable collective
resilience of the Haitian people in terms of their own restraint in
waiting for assistance and for relief items.
Amidst the
rubble, Ambassador Ramdin noted that Haitians—both the people and
government—are making a lot of progress in organizing themselves. They
are clearly taking the lead in setting the priorities for the country,
he said. “It is an opportunity for the Haitian government to make bold
decisions; to look at the long-term perspective; to look at fundamental
changes and improvements in how they organize themselves and society.”
“Reconstructing
is not going to be enough,” said Ramdin. In moving forward, there is an
opportunity to try to build a future which is going to take in account
the weaknesses of the past, a fact he said was acknowledged in his
conversations with Prime Minister Jean Max Bellerive, who is very much
aware that they cannot build where the conditions are not favorable.
The government is looking at certifying any kind of reconstruction or
physical infrastructure or buildings. “That is a good sign that the
government is aware that it cannot be business as usual, It is time for
change, and there is an opportunity for change,” the Assistant
Secretary General remarked. He added that an important issue also
discussed related to rebuilding and decentralizing to more urban areas
to ease some of the pressure on Port-au-Prince and allow other
communities in the country to develop as well.
We need to
mobilize all stakeholders in the process—in the first place, the people
of Haiti, the Haitian government, support from neighboring countries,
the Dominican Republic, CARICOM, who have a moral authority to advocate
Haiti’s needs internationally. He specially commended the Dominican
Republic, which was among the first to provide response, through a
massive operation to deliver support and relief aid to the people of
Haiti.
The PADF’s John Sanbrailo witnessed the Foundation’s
operations at its warehouse in Port-au-Prince, and commented that
despite the tremendous constraints, supplies have begun to flow to the
neediest. He recognized the many Haitians volunteering alongside PADF
staff, and thanked the many donors so far, but stressed the need for
more help for the PADF, the 48-year old disaster relief arm of the OAS,
which is moving to launch a cash-for-work program in a major clean-up
effort for which donations are needed. He specially acknowledged the
more than $30,000 in personal contributions from OAS employees,
delivered by the Secretary General and the Assistant Secretary General.
Sanbrailo
underscored the most immediate needs in Haiti for tents, and other
humanitarian supplies, food, tarps, plastic sheeting, bedding, and
water purification supplies, in addition to cash. He said the PADF is
ready to receive those types of contributions and to ship them very
quickly to the earthquake victims in Haiti