Haiti Earthquake | February 09, 2010 | 2 comments

Haiti's need for rain resistant shelter for 750,000 homeless critical

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JanforGore
Should there not be adequate shelter when the rains hit, that will be the true humanitarian disaster.
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    Community,   News and Politics,   Green,   Haiti Earthquake
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    Environment Haiti humanitarian aid Rainy Season
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2 comments // Haiti's need for rain resistant shelter for 750,000 homeless critical

  • Reaper26
    • 0
      Reaper26  
    • this where military squadrons like Navy Sea bees and AF RED HORSE can come in and not only train recruits but build shelters. thats what they do in the military.

    • 1 year ago
  • JanforGore
    • 0
      JanforGore  
    • Excerpt:

      The rains, which so far have steered clear of the devastated capital of Port-au-Prince, will add to Haiti's relief effort a new layer of health and shelter challenges, say international humanitarian officials and disaster experts.

      And despite the massive initial outpouring of aid from the world and the US in particular, the sheer size of the needs – coupled with a debilitated Haitian government – means that assistance is falling short, especially for shelter.

      “Our concern now is that the rainy season is about to come,” says Kim Bolduc, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon’s deputy special representative to MINUSTAH, the UN’s stabilization force in Haiti. “The priority now is on delivering some sort of hurricane-proof shelter.”

      Rain any time now
      The Caribbean hurricane season does not start until June or July. But Haiti’s rainy season begins earlier, with showers heavy enough to cause landslides and to complicate rubble-removal efforts possible at any time.

      The chief concern: how the rains will affect the makeshift camps where more than 500,000 Haitians have taken up emergency residence, building small huts of sheets or tarps or setting up donated tents. The camps’ precarious living and sanitation conditions will deteriorate further with regular rainfall, relief experts say.

      “With the rains will come increased health and sanitation concerns,” says Ms. Bolduc, who spoke from Port-au-Prince to reporters via webcast on Monday.

      Even without the rains, Haiti’s needs remain daunting four weeks after a devastating 7.0-magnitude earthquake.

      • Of an estimated 1 million homeless, roughly 250,000 have received temporary or medium-term shelter. That means three-quarters of a million people are without minimal shelter or are crowding in with family members or friends.

      • Sanitation remains a “weak spot” in the relief effort, experts say, with only about 1 of every 20 latrine requests filled so far. (Relief groups like Oxfam are working to remove thousands of tons of human waste and garbage from the camps before they become an extreme health hazard, but water supplies and shelters are still being affected.)

    • 2 years ago
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