"Bloodied" Haiti and donors look at recovery plans
PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) - Haiti could start relocating homeless earthquake survivors from its ruined capital this week, but it will need at least five to 10 years of international help to rebuild from the catastrophe, the government said on Monday. Appealing for long-term support from foreign donors meeting in Montreal, Canada, Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive told them his people had been "bloodied, martyred and ruined" by the January 12 quake that killed up to 200,000 and left hundreds of thousands more Haitians injured and homeless. Bellerive thanked the world community for its help so far, but said "more and more and more" was needed to rebuild a fragile Caribbean state which even before the quake was the poorest in the Western Hemisphere. "What we''re looking for is a long-term (development) commitment ... At least five to 10 years," he said. As the huge ongoing relief operation for Haiti turns from rescue to recovery, authorities have said they are looking to relocate at least 400,000 survivors -- now sheltering in more than 400 sprawling makeshift camps across Port-au-Prince -- in temporary tent villages outside the wrecked city. "We have to evacuate the streets and relocate the people," Communications Minister Marie Laurence Jocelyn Lassegue said. "We hope we will be able to start at the end of the week." Health Minister Alex Larsen said 1 million Haitians had been displaced from their homes in the Port-au-Prince area. The government had tents for 400,000 to be used in the new, temporary settlements, but would need more. Bellerive said in Montreal President Rene Preval had called him to ask donors for a further 200,000 tents. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner and representatives of 10 other countries attended the donors'' meeting. The United States has offered to host a pledging conference of international aid donors at the United Nations in March, Canadian Foreign Minister Lawrence Cannon said in Montreal. Almost daily aftershocks have shaken Port-au-Prince since the quake, raising the possibility the city eventually might have to be rebuilt on a safer location, away from dangerous geological fault lines. "In 30 seconds, Haiti lost 60 percent of its GDP (gross domestic product)," Bellerive said, referring to excessive centralization in the capital. "So we must decentralize." He noted that already people had streamed from the capital. Nearly two weeks after the massive magnitude-7.0 quake demolished swaths of the Haitian capital and other cities, the huge U.S.-led international relief operation is struggling to feed, house and care for hundreds of thousands of hungry, homeless survivors, many of them injured. |