On the eve of July 12, contradictory or exaggerated claims were made
about Canadian government aid to Haiti. The Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation and Canwest news agency reported that Canada has committed
"more than $1 billion" for Haiti. Yet only days earlier, on July 9, the
Quebec French-language daily Le Devoir, and the English-language Canadian Press
news agency, reported that Canada has not given a dime to the Haiti
Reconstruction Fund established by the March 31 United Nations Donor
Conference in New York.
So what is the true record of Canada's
assistance to Haiti since the earthquake, and what more needs to be done
to assist the hundreds of thousands of victims who have received little
or no aid?
The numbers
In a July 9 press release, written as a rebuttal to the aforementioned Le Devoir and Canadian Press
reports, Foreign Affairs Minister Lawrence Cannon and Minister of
International Cooperation and Development Bev Oda stated that Canada
contributed $150 million to Haiti in the weeks following the quake. The
ministers also said an additional $400 million has been pledged to Haiti
for the next two years.
At a subsequent July 12 press conference, the ministers upped the
figure, saying that Canada has spent, or is committing, a total of $1.1
billion in aid to Haiti. But their time frame of commitment predates the
earthquake considerably, covering the years 2006 to 2012.
Other figures are also misleading. The $150 million figure noted on
July 9 reflected spending announcements in January and April. The $400
million figure was announced by Canada at the March 31 UN Donors
Conference. Media reports gave the impression that this $400 million is
Canada's contribution to the Haiti Reconstruction Fund (HRF) established
at the conference. In fact, Canada's contribution to the Fund is listed
on the Fund's website as "$30-$45 million" [funds listed are in US
dollars].
It so happens that $30 million is the minimum payment required to
secure a seat on the Fund's board of directors. The HRF's spending
decisions are controlled by international financial institutions, the
Fund's board of directors, and the Interim Haiti Reconstruction
Commission. The latter consists of 26 members, half of whom are
non-Haitian. It is chaired by former U.S. president Bill Clinton and
Haitian Prime Minister Max Bellerive.
Few of the countries pledging to the Fund are in a rush to pay up.
According to the undated pledge page on the Fund's website, only three
countries have met their pledges - Brazil, Australia and Estonia, for a
total of US$64 million. Canada says it will pay up "soon." But Cannon
and Oda voiced a reason for their delay at the July 12 press conference.
They said they are concerned by Bill Clinton's remarks the preceding
week in which he criticized laggard donor countries for their failure to
pay.
Cannon said: "I want to be able to, with Minister Oda, discuss with
[Clinton] so that we scope all that out and get a better sense of what
he means by those comments." Canada's government has been telling its
people that its response to the earthquake was swift and generous.
Clinton's remarks were an embarrassment to it.
The Fund's total pledges amount to a paltry US$509 million. The $5.3
billion-plus figure which the international media reports as pledged to
Haiti consists of promises by the world's governments and aid agencies
at the March 31 conference, in all forms and covering the next 18
months.
For Haiti, there is a major concern with the promises. The record
following previous natural disasters is that the majority of funds
promised are never paid. There is every reason to believe that this will
again be the case unless significant political pressure demands
aggressive and meaningful reconstruction aid from the world's big
powers.
There is another flaw in the international financial promises: very
little aid is going to Haitian organizations. Dr. Paul Farmer of the
prestigious Partners In Health testified before the Congressional Black
Caucus in Washington, DC on July 27 that of the $1.8 billion in
earthquake relief sent to Haiti to date, only three percent was
delivered to the Haitian government. Even Canada's outgoing Governor
General, the Haitian-born Michaëlle Jean, was moved to say in France
recently: "The time has come to break with the logic of aid that has
transformed Haiti into a laboratory [for NGOs]" [Agence France Presse,
Jul. 20].
Canada's $1.1 Billion
Below is a rough breakdown of the CAN$1.1 billion that Canada says it has spent, or is promising, in Haiti:
* $555 million for 2006-11. Status: Most of this money predates the
earthquake. It largely has funded police and prison institutions as well
as massively boycotted 2009 elections.
* $400 million announced on March 31, 2010 and again on Jul. 12. Status: Promised over the next two years.
* $150 million for short-term earthquake relief. Status: Given to UN
agencies and NGO's; difficult to confirm how much was spent, and where.
* $30-45 million to the Haiti Reconstruction Fund. Status: Yet to be paid.
* $40 million for debt cancellation. Status: Much of this dates from
the years of the Duvalier dictatorship. It is owed to international
financial institutions and is not "earthquake relief."
* Sums spent on Canadian military and police agencies in Haiti. Status: Amounts unknown and unreported.
Additionally, the federal government has said it will match $220
million of the donations that individual Canadians gave to charities
between Jan. 12 and Feb. 16. The Canadian International Development
Agency (CIDA) said in New York on March 31 that half of the $220
million, that is, $110 million, is included in the $400 million
announcement. The other half, Minister Oda said on July 12, would go to
"the continuing work of humanitarian development [non-governmental
organizations] and institutions in their efforts." In other words, it is
not new money at all.
Several expenditures recently announced by Canada for police training
and equipment as well as prison construction were not mentioned by the
ministers on July 12 and do not appear in earthquake relief
announcements by the government or CIDA. These include $34.6 million
announced by Minister Oda on April 8, and $4.4 million by Minister
Cannon during a three-day visit to Haiti in early May.
Presumably, the optics of police and prison spending precluded these
expenditures from being counted as "earthquake aid and relief." But such
expenditures fit entirely into Canada's ongoing policies in Haiti. Its
"aid" spending since 2004 has principally gone to prisons and policing.
Furthermore, Cannon announced in Haiti on May 8 that unnamed
international agencies had decided that Canada's principal contribution
to the UN mission in Haiti would continue to be in the realm of
"security."
Militarization of aid
Such spending on police and prisons is not the first for Canada since
January 12. The principal Canadian government response to the earthquake
was to dispatch two Canadian warships loaded with nearly 2,000 soldiers
and sailors. They arrived offshore from Léogâne and Jacmel on Jan. 19
and 20.
At the time, this was touted by the government as a major earthquake
relief operation. But as the Mar. 12 Halifax Chronicle Herald later
reported, the ships carried relatively few earthquake relief supplies
and equipment. They were instead loaded with military personnel and
supplies.
The military operations performed only peripheral aid and supply tasks.
The medical teams the ships brought did not perform a single surgery,
according to a study by John Kirk and Emily Kirk in April (www.counterpunch.org/kirk04012010.html).
When the ships departed six weeks after arriving, they took with them
their vital air traffic control and heavy lift equipment.
The Canadian military operation was identical in motivation to the much
better known U.S. military intervention. Both were intended to stifle
any aspirations for political sovereignty and social justice that were
dashed by the U.S./Canada/France-backed overthrow of Haiti's elected
government in Feb. 2004 and that might arise anew in the aftermath of
the earthquake.
Furthermore, Haiti was "used as a launchpad for redeploying [Canadian]
combat troops to the Middle East war theater," reported Global
Research's Michel Chossudovsky on March 29. "Canadian troops initially
dispatched to Haiti under a humanitarian mandate are being sent to
Afghanistan,"as was done with US troops.
Though the military convoy was announced as Canada's principal
emergency response to the earthquake, the expenditure for it is nowhere
listed in CIDA or government summaries of earthquake aid.
Aid still desperately needed
Canadians who have recently visited or are still working in Haiti
continue to express anger and dismay with the slow pace of
reconstruction. La Presse reporter Patrick Lagacé wrote upon
arrival in Port-au-Prince on Jul. 9: "This is what strikes the visitor
returning to Port-au-Prince six months after the earthquake. Nothing has
changed. Or very little. Too little."
Member of Parliament Jim Karygiannis (Scarborough-Agincourt) wrote to
Prime Minister Stephen Harper on July 20: "I have recently returned from
a trip to Haiti. I was appalled by the living conditions of the victims
of the Jan. 12th earthquake. Six months is too long for victims to wait
for the rebuilding process to begin," he wrote. "We must act now."
The Quebec-based Architectes de l'urgence ("Emergency Architects") says
it has been waiting three months for funds from the UN and European
Union so they can begin to construct shelters. "We still haven't seen a
dime," says its president, Patrick Coulombel.
"Six months after the earthquake, reconstruction has hardly begun," he told Agnes Gruda of La Presse, as reported on July 9. "This is completely abnormal."
On July 12, CBC News cited Hans van Dillen, head of mission
for Doctors Without Borders, as follows: "What we see when we drive
around Port-au-Prince is that the situation is pretty much as it was
after the earthquake."
"Removing the rubble left behind by this disaster, reaching remote
areas with building materials, and obtaining permissions to build from
landowners remain our main challenges to providing sturdy shelter for
families," Conrad Sauvé, secretary general of the Canadian Red Cross,
told the same CBC news report.
Two of the most pressing needs in Haiti today are the clearing of
rubble from the streets and neighbourhoods, and the construction of
temporary or permanent shelter. According to UN agencies, 125,000
durable shelters are needed, but only 5,000 have been constructed.
With all of the equipment and resources available in wealthy countries
like Canada, such immediate needs should be well on the road to being
met. Yet, they persist. It is a testimony to the failure of will and
good intentions of the world's wealthy governments.
According to CBC News, observers say it could take 20 years to
clear the rubble from the cities in the earthquake zone. The Haitian
people, of course, will not wait that long. They are speaking out,
protesting and taking reconstruction into their own hands wherever
possible. All signs point to a deepening effort by the Haitian people to
take their destiny back into their hands and launch the reconstruction
effort that their foreign overseers are so demonstrably unable to lead.
Roger Annis is a coordinator of the Canada Haiti Action Network in Vancouver BC. He can be reached at rogerannis(at)hotmail.com.