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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Haitians who survived destruction face new fear: rain

Haitians return to find family as commercial flights restart
Port-Au-Prince (AFP) Feb 19, 2010 - Haitians arrived Friday on the first commercial flight into their country since last month's earthquake, desperately hoping to find family members alive and their homes still standing. "I want to see my wife," said Jean Felix as he waited to board the plane before takeoff in Miami. "She's living in the street and she's told me by phone that we lost everything... I'm going there with my heart broken." The American Airlines plane touched down in Port-au-Prince to a warm welcome after leaving from Miami, but many passengers carried a heavy emotional load. The flight came to a stop at the terminal with 132 passengers onboard. A pilot waved a Haitian flag from the cockpit window.

A band playing Creole music in the terminal greeted their arrival -- a common practice prior to the devastating quake -- but the passengers were bussed to a separate building to pass through immigration and customs controls because of damage to the airport. Amid the small celebration, travelers were anxious to visit family members who survived and the graves of those who did not. Some wondered about how their own homes had fared in the disaster. Marie Ange Levasseur, 45, began to cry as she spoke of how her cousin, who died in the quake, used to greet her at the airport when she would visit. Levasseur now lives in Miami but still has family in Haiti. "The first destination I want them to take me to is my cousin's grave," she said as she waited in line for immigration. "It's very sad, this trip. I've never had such a sad trip like that."

The capital's airport has been an aid lifeline for the devastated country in the wake of the January 12 earthquake that killed more than 217,000 people and left over a million homeless. Officials said resuming commercial traffic would inject crucial revenue into Haiti's crippled government. But for Haitians, it was simply a way of finding out who was still alive. "I don't have news from my sons nor from my brothers," said Maurice Gernier, before boarding in Miami. "I don't know anything, nothing about anybody... I need to go and see what happened." Jean Eddy Porche, 49, who also lives in Miami, arrived in Port-au-Prince with his wife to check on family members and the house he still owns here. He had been told it was damaged and was not sure whether it could be repaired. Homes belonging to his mother and sister were completely destroyed.

"I have friends who are dead, cousins," said Porche, adding that he felt "completely traumatized" upon arrival. Outside the Port-au-Prince airport, family members waited under the sun behind yellow caution tape for the passengers to emerge. Some embraced as they saw each other, while others seemed weary and simply turned and walked down the street together. Since the earthquake, the country's largest commercial airport has been transformed into a makeshift military base, with over a hundred armed forces and UN flights passing through each day when traffic was at its peak. Thousands of tonnes of food and medical aid, along with disaster relief personnel have poured into Haiti via the hub, which at times has

been overwhelmed, forcing officials to turn away some aircraft. US embassy spokeswomen Elizabeth Detmeister said the resumption of commercial routes meant that US evacuation flights would now be phased out. American Airlines will offer two flights a day from Miami and one from nearby Fort Lauderdale. A flight from New York's JFK International Airport will operate four times a week, the airline said. From March 12, the airline's American Eagle service will launch a new daily route to Haiti from Puerto Rico, and two flights through Santo Domingo and Santiago in the neighboring Dominican Republic.
by Staff Writers
Port-Au-Prince (AFP) Feb 19, 2010
The rain came in the middle of the night, turning the ground under tents made of blankets into mud, and all anyone could do at Haiti's sprawling homeless camps was be thankful it was not May.

They sought better cover or just stayed where they were. Some were resigned to not sleeping.

"You've got to stand up," said Markson Jean, a 24-year-old who lives with his three-year-old child in a massive camp at what used to be a country club golf course on a hilltop overlooking Port-au-Prince.

Haitians who survived the collapse of their homes in last month's devastating earthquake that killed more than 200,000 now fear something that may at first seem far less threatening: rain.

Downpours like the one early Thursday have provided a reminder that the heavy rain season begins around May even as 1.2 million people made homeless by the quake remain living in camps or in the streets.

Besides the obvious concern that homeless camps will be consumed by mud, the rains also threaten to create a nightmare health scenario unless functioning latrines and drainage can be built in time.

The UN humanitarian coordinator, Kim Bolduc, said last week that the Champ de Mars camp near the destroyed National Palace, where some 16,000 people are living, had already "turned into an almost dangerous area" due to poor sanitation.

Aid workers are rushing out tarpaulins in a bid to provide everyone with some kind of shelter before the heavy rains, but officials admit that they will only provide basic protection even if they can be distributed to everyone in time.

They are also working to build latrines, but UN officials recently estimated that only five to 10 percent of what was needed had been completed.

"No matter what, though, it's not going to be pretty," Anthony Banbury, the deputy head of the UN mission here, recently told AFP.

Officials have chosen to focus on distributing tarpaulins instead of tents in part because they can reach more people faster.

"There is an impression out there that we will be able to turn around and build transitional shelter with framing and all that by the rainy season. Forget it," said Canadian Deputy Commanding General Nicolas Matern of the Haiti Joint Task Force.

"It ain't going to happen. We don't have the resources nor the time to do it."

The strategy is a hard one for many desperate Haitians to accept.

Some waiting in line recently to collect tarpaulins -- including those who said they arrived at 3:00 am for the distribution that began more than seven hours later -- said the material was not nearly enough.

After Thursday's rain at the golf club camp, where a vast patchwork of makeshift tents housing thousands stretches downhill on what used to be bright green grass, Haitians dug small trenches to keep their tiny living spaces from flooding again.

They hung clothes from rope, dragged mattresses out to dry and washed clothes. Others waited in line for vaccinations.

"Water came in over the ground," said Clautide Berlice, 32, as she washed clothes in a small basin outside her shelter made of blankets and wood. "It was really hard."

Ten people live in her shelter near the top of the hill at the golf course, where the view extends past collapsed buildings and ruined neighborhoods toward the Caribbean Sea.

The camp is better off than others, with many tarpaulins being used as opposed to scrap material, though there is plenty of that as well.

Old signs were turned into walls, while thin tree branches were being nailed together to form frames.

Some said they had been provided with food rations such as rice. Others said they had yet to be given anything.

Elisoi Mista, 64, carried sticks for his makeshift tent in one hand and a machete in the other. He too said water had entered the shelter where his wife and two children live the night before.

His house collapsed in the quake, but he and his family were not inside at the time.

"God has given me a chance," he said. "Because we are still alive."



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