Haiti: Time To Email And Call Congress

(4 pm. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

Enough.  I’ve been writing for the past week, daily, because I’m concerned that the cholera outbreak in Haiti endangers the lives of hundreds of thousands of people and especially threatens the more than a million Haitians who are living in tents or under tarps in Port au Prince and elsewhere in the country.

This morning’s Miami Herald Editorial captures exactly what needs to be said in the US about this impending public health disaster:

As of Wednesday, cholera had claimed at least 583 lives and sickened more than 9,000, according to the Health Ministry. Frantic aid workers are fighting to keep the outbreak from spreading into congested earthquake survivor camps in Port-au-Prince.

This is misery piled upon misery, part of the burden of history in a country where natural disasters are practically a chronic affliction. But this time around Haiti’s problems have been compounded by the inexcusably slow pace of recovery and reconstruction.

Ten months after the earthquake, more than one million people still live under plastic sheeting, vulnerable to rainstorms and other menaces. Security in these camps is woefully lacking.

Much of the devastation, meanwhile, has not been cleaned up. Mountains of rubble are evident wherever the earthquake hit. So far, only 5 percent has been removed, far short of the amount that could reasonably have been expected. Bureaucratic delays in disbursing available funds are a major reason for the lack of progress.

These are basic relief tasks that have been left undone. Tireless work by an army of relief workers has stabilized the situation, but the cholera epidemic threatens to undo their efforts.

The reasons for the shaky start are not hard to fathom — the scale of the devastation, widespread poverty, an ineffective government that suffered a crippling blow when the earthquake destroyed virtually all of the federal buildings and killed thousands of public employees.

But that was, we repeat, 10 months ago. Humanitarian emergencies are never easy to cope with, particularly an off-the-charts disaster like the one that rocked Haiti. Yet despite an encouraging international response at the outset and promises of coordination and cooperation at all levels, the effort has bogged down.

You already know all of that.  The editorial then repeats something that has been frustrating me since the first news of cholera was reported and which is the reason we now need to take action:

President Obama can send a signal by calling for lawmakers to move quickly to allow disbursement of $1.15 billion in reconstruction money for Haiti. The president signed a bill approving the money last July, but the funds remain stuck on Capitol Hill while lawmakers quibble over the details of a spending plan.

It’s simple what to do.  Email or call your Senators and Congresspersons.  Email or call the White House.  Ask them, please, to make sure that these funds get released.  Now.

Here’s my email, that I sent to Senators Schumer and Gillibrand:

I am deeply concerned that the cholera epidemic in Haiti endangers the lives of hundreds of thousands of people and that US aid to the country is bogged down and has not been received.  The Congress appropriated more than $1 billion for aid to Haiti after the earthquake earlier this year. Today’s Miami Herald Editorial notes, “President Obama can send a signal by calling for lawmakers to move quickly to allow disbursement of $1.15 billion in reconstruction money for Haiti. The president signed a bill approving the money last July, but the funds remain stuck on Capitol Hill while lawmakers quibble over the details of a spending plan.”  I am writing because I want you to do whatever is in your power to get this aid delivered to Haiti.  This aid is already long overdue.  And receipt of this aid in Haiti is urgently needed to save lives.

You can use this, or you can write your own.  I’m sure you understand the idea.

Please pitch in.  I don’t want to sit here and watch this cholera epidemic unfold without making a major effort to stop it.  A first step in that direction, I think, is the delivery of this aid to Haiti.

——

cross posted from The Dream Antilles and daily Kos

9 comments

Skip to comment form

    • on 11/11/2010 at 18:06
      Author

    And may the people of Haiti be well.

    Thank you for reading, and thank you for taking action.

    • on 11/11/2010 at 18:34

    We don’t even have a handle on the aftermath from the January earthquake. Everyone was breathing a sigh of relief that the island was spared any major storms this season when the cholera epidemic broke out. The downpours from Thomas didn’t help.

    Cholera is rare in the area and most people don’t know what to do. When the symptoms start they aren’t seeking care fast enough, so they are coming in to the aid stations, clinics and hospitals in very serious condition.

    Tons of supplies have been coming in from hundreds of NGO’s but there is no true coordination which means there is overlap and waste.

    Sen. Coburn (R-OK) has a hold on $500 million because of questions about duplication and how the money will be funded. Meanwhile, the US can pump billions into war unquestioned.

    • on 11/11/2010 at 19:52

    I have tweeted it and will put it up on the other services.

    • on 11/11/2010 at 21:02

    This is the latest from Al Jeezera which has had the best reporting and coverage of Haiti

    Cholera crisis deepens in Haiti

    Fears grow over rapid spread of cholera in the capital, as death toll rises to 724 people across the nation.

    Haiti’s cholera crisis has deepened as three more deaths in Port-au-Prince, the capital, raised fears the epidemic could be set to rocket in unsanitary camps full of survivors from January’s earthquake.

    The Haitian health ministry said on Thursday that 724 people around the country had now died from the highly contagious water-borne disease and that the number of infections had passed the 11,000 mark.

    The outbreak, Haiti’s first in more than 50 years, erupted in the Artibonite River valley in mid-October and initially seemed to have been contained to central and northern areas.

    There have been roughly 1,000 new cases on each day this week and the death curve is getting steadily steeper with 60 new fatalities recorded on Wednesday and more than 80 on Thursday.

    More worrying still is the fact that three more deaths have been confirmed in Port-au-Prince, which recorded its first fatality from the disease on Tuesday. . . . .

    Leading humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders (MSF) said this week it was extremely concerned at the increase in the number of patients with cholera-like symptoms in the capital’s slums and tent cities.

    “The increasing numbers of cases of suspected cholera in our facilities throughout Port-au-Prince are certainly alarming,” said the statement from Stefano Zannini, MSF head of mission in Haiti.

    MSF, which runs the Saint Catherine’s Hospital in the Cite Soleil slum where the capital’s first cholera fatality was confirmed, is constructing an additional 320-bed facility in the Sarthe neighborhood.

    Oxfam said it had a team of 25 staff working around the clock with a water, hygiene and sanitation program reaching about 100,000 people to distribute soap, water purification tablets, buckets and rehydration salts.

    “It is a very serious development that cholera has spread in Port-au-Prince,” the organisation said in a statement.

    “However, it is understandable. With heavy rains and flooding over the weekend, in an environment where there is poor sanitation, waterborne diseases like cholera spread very rapidly.”

    • on 11/12/2010 at 19:08

    Haiti: MSF Steps Up its Cholera Response in Port-au-Prince

    Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) continues to step up its response to the growing number of patients in Port-au-Prince experiencing the clinical symptoms of cholera.

    As is the case in other MSF health facilities, rising numbers of patients have been admitted to Choscal Hospital, a Haitian Ministry of Public Health hospital in Cité Soleil, due to acute watery diarrhea and vomiting-both of which are symptoms of cholera infection. The MSF-supported hospital has received hundreds of cases over the past five days. “Yesterday we recorded 216 separate cases of cholera arriving at the hospital, while the total number recorded just 5 days ago was 30,” said Stefano Zannini, MSF head of mission in Haiti, on Thursday. “Patients are coming from everywhere, throughout the city, slums and wealthier areas.” . . . .

    MSF currently has 165 international staff members and more than 400 Haitian staff members working on cholera treatment in the country. MSF has been assisting with cholera treatment in several towns in the north of the country and is supporting treatment centers in Gonaives and Gros Morne. A 20-bed cholera treatment center has also been set up in Leogane, where MSF already runs a hospital. And in Port-au-Prince, MSF teams are scaling up their capacity to receive people presenting with cholera-like symptoms, aiming to have 1,000 beds available in locations throughout the city in the coming days.

Comments have been disabled.