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Toll grows in Haitian, Dominican
floods
• Deforestation, product of
imperialist domination, results in social disaster
BY MICHAEL ITALIE -The Militant-
The number of dead or
missing in the floods in Haiti and the Dominican
Republic has reached 3,300, with tens of thousands
more remaining homeless. Meanwhile, in a callous act
that shows where their priorities lie, Washington
and other imperialist powers have cut off the use of
military helicopters for the delivery of emergency
aid to the thousands in need, concentrating instead
on securing their military control of Haiti. The
Haitian government does not have helicopters of its
own.
Aid workers in some cases
have been reduced to loading up mules to deliver
supplies of food, clothing, and other necessities to
thousands of flood victims in the hardest-hit areas.
The consequences of this
capitalist-bred catastrophe are being felt most
deeply in Haiti, where three-quarters of the deaths
have occurred.
Deforestation in Haiti-the
result of decades of imperialist domination-is a
major reason for the magnitude of the disaster for
those living in the area, especially in the Haitian
towns of Mapou and Fond Verrettes and the nearby
village of Jimaní in the Dominican Republic.
Only 1 percent of Haiti’s
land has tree cover. In the neighboring Dominican
Republic it is only 15 percent. With no tree roots
to hold soil to the mountains, the rains that began
in mid-May by May 24 rapidly became flood waters and
brought with them waves of silt, gravel, and
boulders that slammed into villages.
The disappearance of the
woodland is the product of the lack of most forms of
modern fuel in rural areas, which forces working
people to cut wood for their own use or to sell it
for charcoal-the only means of survival for many.
This situation is compounded by the lack of
electricity and inadequate roads, housing, and
communications, as well as the virtual absence of
medical facilities. The U.S. capitalists, who for
decades have viewed Haiti as a source of cheap labor
and natural resources, and the wealthy Haitian
families who rule that country, have never
considered such facilities to be priorities.
The arrival of the wet
season in June brings the potential for worsening
the disaster for working people. Where the May rains
did not devastate towns, they created dams above
them from debris that can break open with a new
burst of rainfall. The Haitian villages of Bawa, St.
Michel, Nan Galette, and Naroche are all in
immediate danger.
“Our biggest concern right
now is that these four villages are at risk of
landslides, mudslides, and rockslides,” Bernard
Barrat of the Red Cross told the BBC. As an
indication of the minimal assistance Haitian workers
and peasants are receiving in the face of this
imminent threat, he said, “We’ve distributed plastic
sheeting for people to make temporary shelters in
hilly areas.”
Among the first on the scene
to aid the victims of this social catastrophe have
been Cuban volunteer doctors. More than 500 Cuban
medical volunteers are providing vital health-care
services in Haiti, including in remote areas of the
countryside where Haitian or U.S. doctors would
refuse to work. Two Cuban doctors are staffing a
clinic set up in Mapou, where the “lake” around the
town still contains many bodies and dead animals.
The Caribbean Disaster Emergency Response Agency
reported that a Haitian relief engineer “and four
Cuban doctors managed to arrive to Fond Verrettes by
land though the last five kilometers had to be on
the dry river bed.”
In contrast to the response
to the calamity by the Cuban medical personnel, on
May 31 Washington ordered a halt to the use of its
military helicopters for delivery of emergency
supplies to areas cut off by the flooding. A U.S.-led
force of 3,600 troops from the United States, France,
and Canada, has been in Haiti to “restore order” for
the government of Haitian prime minister Gérard
Latortue.
Latortue was put in power as
a result of a rightist rebellion in February. The
elected president of Haiti, Jean-Bertrand Aristide,
was shanghaied by U.S. troops and taken by plane to
Africa. After spending several weeks in Jamaica, he
is now living in South Africa.
On June 1 the first of a
projected 8,000-strong United Nations military and
police force formally took over control of the
occupation from U.S. forces. It is likely that
Washington will keep some kind of military force in
Haiti in the future.
Like the departing U.S.
forces, the UN troops and cops, headed by a
Brazilian general, have put flood relief on the back
burner.
“The UN peacekeeping mission
doesn’t have helicopters right now, and it will take
weeks for them to deploy some,” a representative of
the UN food relief agency told the New York Times
by way of explanation. The agency’s director in
Haiti said, “We deeply deplore that the
multinational force has other priorities.”
The Times reported
June 1 that “the aid workers are talking about using
mules to ferry aid to thousands of victims. Given
the state of Haiti’s interim government, the
agencies say they may have to rent bulldozers and
rebuild ruined roads themselves.” |