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> <channel><title>Aristide Foundation for Democracy &#187; Democratic Debates</title> <atom:link href="http://www.aristidefoundationfordemocracy.org/tag/democratic-debates/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" /><link>http://www.aristidefoundationfordemocracy.org</link> <description>tout moun se moun  -- every human being is a human being</description> <lastBuildDate>Wed, 02 May 2012 17:15:45 +0000</lastBuildDate> <language>en</language> <sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod> <sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency> <generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=3.3.2</generator> <item><title>&#8220;We Want Our Voices To Be Heard&#8221;: Democracy in Haiti&#8217;s Earthquake Zone</title><link>http://www.aristidefoundationfordemocracy.org/2010/04/30/we-want-our-voices-to-be-heard-democracy-in-haitis-earthquake-zone/</link> <comments>http://www.aristidefoundationfordemocracy.org/2010/04/30/we-want-our-voices-to-be-heard-democracy-in-haitis-earthquake-zone/#comments</comments> <pubDate>Fri, 30 Apr 2010 15:23:32 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>lauraflynn</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[Update]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Aristide's Return]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Democratic Debates]]></category> <guid
isPermaLink="false">http://aristidefoundationfordemocracy.org/?p=453</guid> <description><![CDATA[By Laura Flynn “We are living in the mud.  We are wet and we are hungry.  Those in charge have left us without hope. If they have a plan we do not know it.   We are asking about the future.   And we want our voices to be heard, &#8221; Suzette Janvier, a resident of  St. [...]]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>By   Laura  Flynn<em> </em></p><p><em>“We are  living in the mud.  We are wet and we are hungry.  Those in charge have  left us without hope. If they have a plan we do not know it.   We are  asking about the future.   And we want our voices to be heard, &#8221; </em>Suzette    Janvier, a resident of  St. Martin (a neighborhood of central  Port-au-Prince)<em><br
/> </em></p><p>Each Saturday for the past two months a thousand or more Haitian  earthquake survivors have met in the auditorium of the Aristide  Foundation for Democracy to talk about the future of their country.    Since its founding in 1996 the Aristide Foundation, whose auditorium  seats up to 3000 people, has provided a place for grassroots activists  and ordinary Haitians to come together to debate and discuss national  issues.  In response to the earthquake the Foundation is sponsoring  weekly public forums in which participants tell their stories, talk  about the conditions of their lives, and describe their needs; they  receive training or information on the current situation and on their  rights under the Haitian constitution, and the United Nations principles  on Internally Displaced People; and together presenters and  participants brainstorm and discuss actions that can be taken to make  their voices heard.  Each forum has drawn between 900-1500 participants;  the majority of those attending are living in spontaneous settlements  across the earthquake zone&#8211;as are the majority of the citizens of  Port-au-Prince.   Delegations come from other parts of the country as  well, particularly the South and Southeast – Jacmel and Les Cayes  &#8211;which were also hit hard by the quake.</p><p><a
href="../wp-content/uploads/2010/04/DSC00832.jpg" target="_blank"><img
title="DSC00832" src="../wp-content/uploads/2010/04/DSC00832.jpg" alt="" width="640" height="360" /></a></p><p>Participants at AFD forums have offered vivid testimony about  conditions of life in Port-au-Prince since the earthquake. Now that the  rains have begun, people describe spending the nights “<em>domi pandeye</em>,&#8221;    (sleeping while balancing upright), standing under their plastic  sheeting because there  is no room for everyone to be sheltered and lie down, and because water  floods the tents.  During the rainy season, which has already begun,  but will intensify in May, it rains nearly every night.  In the morning  the sun blazes, the heat under the plastic sheeting—which is all most  people have to protect themselves—is stifling.  They are now living in “<em>labouye</em>”  (the mud) 24 hours a day, in camps almost uniformly lacking in  latrines, or other sanitation.</p><p><span
id="more-453"></span></p><p>They describe the struggle to feed their families.   The price of  basic foodstuffs  (rice, beans, cornmeal, cooking oil, and charcoal for  cooking) have risen 15-30% since the earthquake, while incomes have all  but disappeared.  Only those receiving funds from family overseas are  able to purchase food.  For those dependent on international aid,  finding food for their families is an unending labor.  Coupons for food  might be distributed in the camps once a week, though not to everyone  and not with predictability.   Women who were able to get the coupons  must then go to a different site, often miles away, and line up long  before the sun rises.  If they are lucky, by noon they might receive a  50lb bag of rice, which must then be carried or transported back to  where they are living.   The next day the same struggle might begin  again this time to find cooking oil—one day spent in line waiting for  the coupons, another day to travel to where the oil is being  distributed, in a completely different location than the rice.   Often  these ventures yield nothing: there aren’t enough coupons to go around,  the rice runs out, the distribution center has been relocated, or it  does not open due to security concerns.  And with the rains bags of rice  get wet and spoil.</p><p><a
href="../wp-content/uploads/2010/04/DSC00861.jpg" target="_blank"><img
title="DSC00861" src="../wp-content/uploads/2010/04/DSC00861.jpg" alt="" width="640" height="515" /></a></p><p>Participants describe with horror a dramatic rise in  prostitution—young women and girls selling their bodies to feed  themselves and their families.</p><p>They describe the dire health conditions in the camps where  infectious diseases are poised to run rampant.  Each Wednesday since  March 10,<sup> </sup>2010, the Aristide Foundation has held a large free  clinic in the auditorium of the Foundation, providing primary care  services to 1,200 people every week.   What AFD doctors see and hear  from patients in the clinics confirms the testimony in the forums—that  is, high rates of illness that result from the conditions in which  people are living: malnutrition, diarrhea among children, urinary tract  and other infections.</p><p>The first demand of those who have gathered at the AFD in the forums  is for temporary housing in safe and sanitary locations.  The second is  for food.  Beyond this jobs, education, healthcare, and—despite the fact  that most of the participants are urban—they are demanding real  investment in agricultural for food production that can one day offer  food security to the country.</p><p>Underlying all of this, participants in the forums are asking to  participate in the planning of the nation’s future—the necessary  precondition for real recovery.   Those gathering at the AFD, feel more  intensely than ever before, a profound sense of exclusion.</p><p>Certainly there was no attempt at consultation or participation with  Haiti’s vibrant and engaged grassroots organizations in the preparation  of the PRND  (the Post-Disaster Needs Assessment) put forward by the  Haitian government to the international donors conference on March 31<sup>st</sup>.      On the eve of the donor meeting, on March 27, over 1,200 people met at  the AFD for a debate focused on the constitution – specifically the  constitutionality of the creation of the 20-person  Interim Commission  for the Reconstruction of Haiti, dominated by foreigners, which will  oversee all international funding.  The next, even larger, forum focused  on the GOH plan to extend its emergency powers for 18-months in order  to allow the Interim Commission to be created and to exercise  extra-constitutional powers.  Fourteen hundred people gathered, and most  expressed deep concern over the repercussions for Haiti’s sovereignty.   This was followed by three days of sit-ins of 500-600 people, at the  Haitian parliament, to protest the passage of the law.</p><p>In addition to preparing the plan and creating this Interim  Commission without participation, there has also been almost no  communication about what might be in that plan. People coming to the  forums at the Foundation have all heard there’s a plan.  They have no  idea what is in it.  They hear billions of dollars were pledged in New  York.  They have little faith this money will be given, and no faith  that what is given will be spent in their interests.</p><p>The issue at the top of everyone’s mind is the question of temporary  resettlement, of moving people out of the way of the clear and present  danger that the coming more intense rains represent.  But three months  after the quake, no clear message or plan has been articulated by the  Haitian government or international NGOs.</p><p>In early April there were several reports of forced removals of  people encamped on the grounds of private schools, private property, and  from the soccer stadium.  At some sites bulldozers arrived without  notice to tear down shelters and families were left with no a place to  go.  To date it appears the only voluntary relocation which has had any  success is at Corail, where over the last week or two the Haitian  government in collaboration with international NGOs has begun to move  people from the Petionville golf course (where more than 45.000 people  are encamped) to a relocation center at Corail, but this camp is only  intended to hold 7,500 people.   Over one million people are estimated  to be homeless in the metropolitan area.  If there are plans for  temporary shelter for anyone other than those on the Golf Course they  are not being communicated to the general public. Those gathering at the  AFD express fear that they will be forcibly evicted from the camps  where they are living.  They are also skeptical about plans to relocate  people to remote areas, which would leave them cut off from the economic  life of the city, meaning cut off from the mutual aid provided by  families, communities, neighborhood associations etc, and the informal  economy.  Mutual aid and the informal economy are the only things that  keep Haitians alive.  That was true before the quake and it is still  true.</p><p>Efforts to assist must empower Haiti’s powerful networks of mutual  aid and the informal economy—not dismantle, not ignore them.  What would  it mean to empower them?  Community kitchens in the camps, loans to  women to restart <em>“ti komès”</em> (informal sector commerce),  relocation for those in imminent danger <em>with</em> their participation,  finding way of keeping people close to the city if that is what they  desire.  There are thousands of community organizations across Haiti to carry out projects like these.   And if, as we hear, decentralization is a goal for Haiti’s  future, then who is talking to the residents of Port-au-Prince about  lives they might imagine outside the city?   And why out of $12.2  billion dollars requested in the Post Disaster Needs Assessment (the  plan) was only $41 million or .3% allocated for agriculture and  fisheries, i.e. for local food production?</p><p>Forums at the Aristide Foundation, held on March 13, March 20, March  27, April 3, April 17, and April 24, along with the International  Women’s Day event on March 8, 2010 (attended by 3000 women) represent  the largest indoor gatherings of Haitians to discuss and debate the  country’s future since the earthquake.  We are not aware of any occasion  since January 12 where the Haitian government, the UN or any  international NGO planning Haiti’s future and the distribution of aid  funds, have brought large groups of Haitians together to ask for their  opinions, their input, or their stories.</p><p><a
href="../wp-content/uploads/2010/04/DSC00938.jpg" target="_blank"><img
title="DSC00938" src="../wp-content/uploads/2010/04/DSC00938.jpg" alt="" width="640" height="370" /></a></p><p>Finally, those attending the forums at the AFD are unanimous in their  call for the return of former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide to  Haiti. It is best summed up by Jean Vaudre, a community organizer from  Bel Air, who said at the forum on April 17, “If Aristide were here even  if he had no money to help us, he would be with us, in the rain, under  the tents.   If he were here we might believe, we might have hope that  we will be able to participate in the future of the country.”  Hope is a  commodity in short supply right now in Haiti. Is there some way of  rebuilding the country without it?</p><p><em>Laura Flynn is a member of the board of the Aristide Foundation  for Democracy-US, which supports the work of the Aristide Foundation in  Haiti.  AFD-Haiti was founded by Jean-Bertrand Aristide in 1996 on the  principle that to bring real change, democracy must include those at the  margins of society: street children, market women, landless peasants</em>,  restaveks<em> (children living in Haitian households as unpaid domestic  laborers), and the urban poor. For 14 years the Foundation has dedicated  itself to providing educational opportunities, and opening avenues of  democratic participation for those who traditionally have had no access  to education or voice in national affairs. Since the earthquake the AFD  has mobilized its staff, doctors, volunteers and supporters&#8211;nationally  and internationally.  The AFD is operating Mobile Schools in 5 refugee  camps, participating in mobile clinics, and providing medical care to  1,200 people at the AFD each week.</em></p><p>Online Donations to Support the Earthquake Relief Efforts of the  Aristide Foundation for Democracy can be made here:</p><form
action="https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr" method="post"> <input
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/> </strong></p><p><a
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