[HaitiReport] Haiti Report for October 15, 2007 Date: Mon, 15 Oct 2007 09:38:49 -0500 (CDT) Haiti Report for October 15, 2006 The Haiti Report is a compilation and summary of events as described in Haiti and international media prepared by Konbit Pou Ayiti/KONPAY. It does not reflect the opinions of any individual or organization. This service is intended to create a better understanding of the situation in Haiti by presenting the reader with reports that provide a variety of perspectives on the situation. To make a donation to support this service: Konbit Pou Ayiti, 7 Wall Street, Gloucester, MA, 01930. IN THIS REPORT: - Flooding Causes Deaths, Highest Toll in Cabaret - Population of La Gonave Struggles for Water, Rotary Helps - Legislative Elections are Postponed Amidst Allegations of Corruption - UN Security Council to Vote on Future of Haiti Mission - Haitians Honored with New Monument in Savannah Flooding Causes Deaths, Highest Toll in Cabaret: Flooding in Haiti caused by several days of torrential rain has left at least 20 people dead, officials say. Twenty-three bodies were recovered from the town of Cabaret, which was inundated by flooding, Interior Minister Paul Antoine Bien-Aime said. Floods and mudslides across the country have damaged farmland and left hundreds of people homeless. Efforts are being made to evacuate people from villages in dangerous areas, civil defence agencies say. Efforts were underway to provide food and water and shelter to people in Cabaret, Mr Bien-Aime said. Aid operations have been hampered by poor communication links and infrastructure. Heavy rains have also affected other countries in the Caribbean, including Cuba and Jamaica. (BBC, 10/13) Flooding triggered by torrential rains killed at least 23 people in a village in central Haiti on Thursday, a government official said on Friday. The loss of life in Cabaret, nestled in mountains about 30 km north of capital Port-au-Prince, brought the toll from floods and mudslides across much of Haiti over the last two weeks to at least 31, civil protection officials said. Forecasters said on Friday there was no end in sight to the downpours lashing the Caribbean country and some of its neighbors. "In the Cabaret area alone, 23 people are confirmed dead but there could be more and we are still in the process of assessing the situation," Interior Minister Paul Antoine Bien-Aime told local radio. He said efforts were underway to distribute food, water and other supplies to the village, where at least 1,000 people have been made homeless. Heavy rains have also caused havoc in Cuba and Jamaica. (Reuters, 10/13) Population of La Gonave Struggles for Water, Rotary Helps: On the small island of La Gonave, Haiti, the deep blue waters of the Caribbean Sea encroach upon every shore. And yet, for the 100,000 or so who live in the seeming tropical paradise, clean water remains a scarce resource - one whose absence has become a leading cause of death among the youngest there. There are people literally dying of thirst, said Dr. Linda Kofeldt, a retired Staunton physician and activist with the humanitarian group Haiti Outreach. And its not because they dont have enough water, because they have a wonderful aquifer. Its because they cant pump that water up. For La Gonave, one of the poorest areas in the Western Hemispheres single poorest country, a combination of deficient infrastructure and crushing poverty leaves many locals with only brackish, disease-causing water at their disposal. Those lucky enough to live within a few miles of a working well routinely spend hours lugging large buckets back and forth, a chore generally reserved for children. It was this overwhelming level of need that brought Kofeldt to the Waynesboro Rotary Club earlier this year in search of just one thing - cold, hard cash. I knew that Rotary was well-known for taking on water projects, said the doctor of this monetary mission. It was my hope that, after hearing about the conditions in Haiti, the local Rotarians would want to help. They didnt let her down. For the club, whose members number around 80 locally, the plea for donations was a no-brainer, said president Dave Segars. Haiti and La Gonave are both just big sponges of need right now, explained Segars, who visited the island this summer with Kofeldt. They can both soak up everything you can give them. Working with other clubs from Staunton, Augusta County and Nelson County, the Rotarians managed to raise close to $6,000 in local contributions. That cache was then leveraged into a series of matching grants from the larger Rotary organization that brought the final total up to $22,000 - enough to build a well that will, according to Kofeldt, serve around 6,000 Haitians. The Rotary has been just amazing; theyve got a really caring bunch of people, said Kofeldt. We can make a difference here. We can help these people make a change and help them improve their lives. Construction of the well, which will be carried out in partnership with the local community there, will include the installation of a solar-powered pump, an addition that both saves valuable fuel and minimizes the need for maintenance. For the Rotary, this is the start of a long-term commitment to the humanitarian work being done in Haiti. Club leaders envision the construction of more wells - one of the most immediate needs - and perhaps one day a business program that will help Haitians develop their own lines of work. (The News Virginian, 10/15) Legislative Elections are Postponed Amidst Allegations of Corruption: Haiti is delaying legislative elections as it sorts out allegations of financial fraud and criminal activity within the nation's electoral council, a government spokesman said Wednesday. The current Parliament was elected in 2006 after two dormant years in the wake of a 2004 uprising that toppled former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, and 10 out of 30 Senate seats were supposed to be up for election in November. Government spokesman Joseph Jasmin said the election "is certainly not going to happen in November." "I can't give you any estimate when it is going to happen but we will work so it can happen quickly," he said. Jasmin said Rene Preval and leaders of Haitian political parties have reached a consensus to revamp the feuding election panel and replace some or all of its members. The Provisional Electoral Council has long been criticized for votes plagued by ballot irregularities and fraud allegations. Internal conflict reached a head when two members Patrick Fequiere and Louis Jerson Richeme accused commission President Max Mathurin, Secretary- General Rosemond Pradel and Treasurer Francois Benoit of embezzling an undisclosed amount of money for personal use and of trying to have Richeme killed. "The (council) is broken in two. The members are fighting all the time," Jasmin said. Mathurin declined to comment Wednesday, saying he would issue a statement later. Pradel and Benoit could not be contacted. It was unclear how the announcement would affect current business in the Senate, which has the power to dismiss the country's prime minister and members of the Cabinet. (AP, 10/10) An investigation into allegations that members of Haiti's electoral council have misappropriated public funds forced authorities to abandon plans to hold elections next month for a third of the country's Senate seats, an electoral official said on Tuesday. The president of the electoral council, Max Mathurin, said the first round of the ballot, due to take place on Nov. 25, and the second round on Dec. 2 would be postponed because the council had stopped working while the members accused of corruption by their colleagues wait to know their fate. "The decision to set a new date for the election is no longer in our hands ... President (Rene) Preval has to make a decision as to what will become of this electoral council," Mathurin told Reuters. Jostling for political power is getting fiercer as political parties vie for control of the 30-member Senate, which has the constitutional power to fire the prime minister and government ministers. Next month's election was to replace a third of the Senate and also find a replacement for an additional senator killed in an accident this year. The delay means it will not be possible for new senators to take office by the Jan. 14, 2008, deadline set in the constitution. The corruption allegations against three electoral council members were filed by two other members of the nine-seat panel -- Patrick Fequiere and Louis Jerson Richeme. Mathurin, Rosemond Pradel, the council's secretary-general, and Francois Benoit, its treasurer, who have been banned from leaving the country, are accused of misappropriating public funds. The amount allegedly embezzled was not disclosed. Fequiere told Reuters he and Richeme had filed documents proving the allegations but declined further comment because the accusations were being investigated by a prosecutor. Mathurin denied the allegations and said Fequiere and Richeme were trying to destroy the electoral council's reputation because of personal conflicts with other members. "All they want is to destroy this council and to get rid of the other members, hoping they'll keep a seat on the next panel," Mathurin said. Benoit is also the subject of a separate criminal investigation over allegations he tried to kill Richeme. In a complaint filed with prosecutors, Richeme said Benoit pulled a gun on him during a recent discussion at the council's headquarters. (Reuters, 10/9) UN Security Council to Vote on Future of Haiti Mission: The Security Council will analyze this week the situation in Haiti and the future of its mission in that Caribbean nation while the General Assembly will discuss the UN Report of expenses, sources of the organization reported. According to the United Nations' engagement book the assembly will meet in plenary session on Tuesday to choose five non permanent seats to the Security Council next year. Costa Rica and Dominican Republic are the candidates to fill the vacancy Peru will leave for Latin America and the Caribbean. On Monday, besides a Resolution on Haiti, the Council will debate the situation in Georgia, by adopting a resolution too and afterwards will deal with the panorama in Afghanistan, according to the program spread here in this headquarters. On Wednesday it will debate on the annual report of the Commission of Consolidation of Peace and on Friday will analyze the situation in Iraq and its mission there. On Wednesday, the UN Headquarters, in New York, will celebrate the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty with several activities, among them the award ceremony of a Children's Art competition under the theme "We can put an end to poverty," among other activities. (PRensa Latina, 10/15) Haitians Honored with New Monument in Savannah: After 228 years as largely unsung contributors to American independence, Haitian soldiers who fought in the Revolutionary War's bloody siege of Savannah had a monument dedicated in their honor Monday.About 150 people, many of them Haitian-Americans who came to Savannah for the event, gathered in Franklin Square where life-size bronze statues of four soldiers now stand atop a granite pillar 6 feet tall and 16 feet in diameter.``This is a testimony to tell people we Haitians didn't come from the boat,'' said Daniel Fils- Aime, chairman of the Miami-based Haitian American Historical Society. ``We were here in 1779 to help America win independence. That recognition is overdue.''In October 1779, a force of more than 500 Haitian free blacks joined American colonists and French troops in an unsuccessful push to drive the British from Savannah in coastal Georgia.More than 300 allied soldiers were gunned down charging British fortifications Oct. 9, making the siege the second-most lopsided British victory of the war after Bunker Hill.Though not well known in the U.S., Haiti's role in the American Revolution is a point of national pride for Haitians. After returning home from the war, Haitian veterans soon led their own rebellion that won Haiti's independence from France in 1804.``It's a huge deal,'' said Philippe Armand, vice president of the Association of American Chambers of Commerce in Latin America, who flew to Savannah from the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince. ``All the Haitians who have gone to school know about it from the history books.''Fils-Aime's group has spent the past seven years lobbying Savannah leaders to support the monument, which the city approved in 2005, and raising more than $400,000 in private donations to pay for it.Fils-Aime said the historical society still needs $250,000 more to finish two additional soldier statues.As it stands now, the monument features statues of two Haitian troops with rifles raised on either side of a fellow soldier who has fallen with a bullet wound to his chest.The fourth statue, a drummer boy, depicts a young Henri Christophe, who served in Savannah as an adolescent and went on to become Haiti's first president _ and ultimately king _ after it won independence.It's unclear exactly what role Haitian troops played in the battle at Savannah because Haitian records from that era were destroyed by fire in the 1830s, said Scott Smith, director of Savannah's Coastal Heritage Society, which is dedicating a park on the battlefield site Tuesday.But surviving records show 545 Haitian soldiers sailed to Savannah in 1779 _ making them the largest military unit of the Savannah battle. The Haitians are also believed to have been the largest black unit to serve in the American Revolution.In the 1800s, Savannah erected monuments in its oak-shaded squares to Revolutionary War heroes Maj. Gen. Nathaniel Greene, one of George Washington's most trusted generals, as well as Brig. Gen. Casimir Pulaski and Sgt. William Jasper, both killed in the Savannah siege.More than a century later, Haitian troops who fought for the same cause have rejoined them in history's ranks.``When you look at the other monuments in the city of Savannah and then you look at this one, this is first class all the way,'' said Savannah Mayor Otis Johnson.On the Net:Haitian- American Historical Societyhttp://www.haitianhistory.org (AP, 10/8) _______________________________________________ HaitiReport mailing list HaitiReport@haitikonpay.org http://lists.haitikonpay.org/mailman/listinfo/haitireport