Haiti: Leadership needed to relocate the 630,000 people still living in tents
Eighteen months after the country's devastating earthquake the crisis in Haiti is still not over
International agency Oxfam today warned that leadership from the new Haitian government is urgently needed to relocate the 630,000 people who are still living under tents and tarpaulins.
These people face many challenges; hurricane season is underway, cholera remains a threat, as does forced eviction from camps. The Haitian government, with help from the international community, must implement a relocation strategy so that those living in camps can resettle or return to their homes.
“Relocating the over 600,000 people still living in the camps was never going to be a quick fix. But the new government, once confirmed, must take key decisions on issues that are preventing people from leaving the camps. This includes settling legal issues over land tenure, creating jobs so that people can pay rent, and removing the rubble which remains on the streets,” said Roland Van Hauwermeiren, country director for Oxfam in Haiti.
Over 100.000 under threat of being forcibly evicted
Recent reports confirm that over 100,000 people are under threat of being forcibly evicted from the camps where they have sought shelter over the past 18 months, this accounts for one in five people currently living in camps.
After the earthquake, hundreds of thousands of people whose houses had been damaged or destroyed sought refuge in the city's open spaces, its parks, car-parks, church and school courtyards. Most of these spaces are privately owned and now, 18 months later, some owners want their land back.
Although these land owners have a right to their land, the use of force and the intimidation of displaced people is not acceptable. People living on these lands must be offered a long-term and adequate solution to their housing needs.
Long-term relocation plan must ensure access to basic services
“The Haitian government must protect those people who have been displaced by the earthquake from now having to face the second trauma of being forcibly evicted from the camps where they have been living,” Van Hauwermeiren said. “We all agree that the camps are neither a long term nor a sustainable solution but people cannot be evicted from the camps without a fair alternative.”
President Michel Martelly has made some progress on this by developing plans to close six camps where approximately 25,000 people are living.
“While it is good to see progress being made on relocation of those living in these six camps, this must be done with a long-term relocation plan in place. The plan must ensure that these people have access to basic services such as drinking water, sanitation services, health care, education and employment opportunities so that they can finally start to rebuild their lives,” Van Hauwermeiren said.
Oxfam still providing support
Eighteen months after the earthquake, Oxfam is providing access to water, latrines and showers to over 100,000 people, as well as supporting water committees in more than 30 sites in Port-au-Prince. These committees are formed by people living in the camps who take charge of the delivery of drinking water and the management of the latrines and showers.
Due to the new cholera outbreak in June 2011, Oxfam widened its cholera response program to reach an extra 77.000 people in one of the most affected zones and continues to monitor the situation in different parts of the capital and rural areas.
A set of programs focused on promoting small enterprises is already in place. In the coming weeks, 160 entrepreneurs will receive a mixture of cash grants, loans and professional training to increase their profitability and stimulate job creation within their community.
Read more
Emergencies where Oxfam is responding
Contact Information
- Cinta Pluma, Port-au-Prince
Cpluma@oxfam.org.uk / +509 3701 0651 - Ana Caistor Arendar, Port-au-Prince
aarendar@oxfam.org.uk / + 52 1 551320 9949
-
Global ammunition trade tops $4bn, yet there is little regulation on who bullets are sold to http://t.co/a3xEUqTh #armstreaty36 min 33 sec ago
-
Est. yearly bullet production enough to kill nearly everyone on the planet—twice. #Armstreaty must include ammunition http://t.co/57oHv9zv42 min 42 sec ago
-
#UNFAO report rightly places need 2 address global #hunger if we're 2 develop in a sustainable way http://t.co/Co3JX8M5 #sustdev #Rioplus201 hour 36 min ago
-
18M ppl now facing #foodcrisis across #Africa's #Sahel region: pls sign #Sahel2012 petition before it's 2late http://t.co/NPLac4NM1 hour 51 min ago
-
“I’m the best ‘Mr Banana’ yet!” @OxfamItalia volunteers tell all @oxfamontour blog http://t.co/gCvSU13O #lovefoodhateinjustice #GROW2 hours 39 min ago
-
#UNFAO report rightly places need to address global #hunger if we are to develop in a sustainable way http://t.co/Co3JX8M5 #sustdev2 hours 44 min ago
-
#Niger: Small-scale farmers harvest against the odds http://t.co/rzEcu0dV #GROW #Sahel2012 @GlobalAgDev @allafrica @stevebaragona3 hours 46 min ago
-
Together w/our partners we reduced the maternal mortality rate in Upper East #Ghana by 7% in 2010 http://t.co/jNcm0kE34 hours 39 min ago
-
#Niger desperate for aid http://t.co/BXgIyS2o Sign #Sahel2012 petition before it's too late http://t.co/NPLac4NM #foodcrisis20 hours 17 min ago
-
Thx for the RTs! @Semhar @NoTime_ToWaste @Animalforce @RodrigueVOY @HUMNEWS @ioetx @redsupanova @thejustcampaign @TheDidiSociety & others!21 hours 33 min ago
-
Grill the @WorldBank's climate experts on today's @ClimateGroup live Q&A at 4pm BST http://t.co/25Or77tt Just tag Qs #CleanRevolution21 hours 40 min ago
-
Sobering thought: in Burundi, a grenade costs the same as a pint of beer http://t.co/NpphYDMg It's time for an #armstreaty now22 hours 50 min ago
-
@DrSkyrme thanks for writing. i'm copying @oxfamgb who may be able to help update the records to avoid this in the future.22 hours 57 min ago
-
The short case for an #amstreaty: $2.2bn worth of arms imported by countries under arms embargoes btw 2000-2010 http://t.co/Wk3EQWM823 hours 18 min ago
-
The #climate crisis is not caused by lack of options & solutions, but lack of political action http://t.co/FhTxEUV7 #Bonn #GROW23 hours 40 min ago
