How humanitarian aid weakened post-earthquake Haiti

More than four years after Port-au-Prince crumbled to the ground, last month’s meeting with a delegation from the American Chamber of Commerce seemed to mark Haiti’s steady new pathway to recovery.

Business elites posed for photo-ops and affirmed President Michel Martelly’s goal to “make Haiti an emerging country by 2030.”

Elsewhere on the island, tens of thousands had yet to emerge from the ruins of the 2010 earthquake, clustered in makeshift encampments, still frozen in the aftermath of the catastrophe.

It was on behalf of these Haitians that human rights activist Antonal Mortime paid a visit to Washington D.C. the same week that the AmCham schmoozed in the Haitian capital.

In collaboration with the American Jewish World Service, he came to tell US activists that Western aid efforts had harmed far more than they had helped.

More than four years since Haiti was flooded by aid money, the chaotic rebuilding effort has widened the country’s social rifts, bringing the first emancipated black Republic under the yoke of a new kind of imperialism.

In an interview with The Nation, Mortime, executive secretary of the Platform of Haitian Human Rights Organizations (POHDH), described the social disaster that had unfolded under the banner of humanitarian aid.

The money that has trickled down has been absorbed in large part by a phalanx of NGOs jostling chaotically for international grant money.

Despite some good intentions, many of these groups, Mortime argues, have funnelled money into ill-planned projects with little oversight or accountability, leading to waste and profiteering that have likely impeded the country’s long-term development.

For many of the countless NGOs that have mushroomed post-disaster, Mortime says, “I think it was important for them to go and help Haiti. But the way they went about it was not the right way.”

Because some NGOs had haphazardly delivered services in a way that displaced indigenous institutions and local services, he adds, “Humanitarian aid actually contributed to a weakening of the state and also to the weakening of local organizations.”

 

False promises

Independent audits have revealed that the groundswell of international assistance efforts, ranging from missionary aid enterprises to ad-hoc home building projects, have operated with little coordination, despite efforts by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, along with an international coordinating body, the Interim Haiti Recovery Commission, chaired by Bill Clinton, to centralize the distribution and deployment of recovery funds.

The international “partnerships” have unravelled amid cost overruns and massive mismanagement.

And Haiti’s government, historically tethered to streams of foreign aid and debt and cheap export trades, remains saddled with a shattered infrastructure and tattered public services.

Today, 100,000 remain “internally displaced,” with ramshackle shanties standing as a sad epitaph to false promises.

Asked about the complications that may arise when money falls into the hands of corrupt agencies, Mortime acknowledges, “It is true that the state structures are very weak,” and there were legitimate reasons for foreign donors to want to bypass the government.

In the long term, however, he says Haiti can only develop self-sufficiency if its public agencies have a stake in the reconstruction.

The recovery effort might have made more progress by now, had the NGOs prioritised working within the existing institutions rooted in Haiti, “to help the state rebuild its own structure, by going through the government agencies that are already there for these specific reasons.”

Conscious of Haiti’s history as a black insurgent republic, Mortime believes in the durability of “the republican institutions of the state,” including, ideally, the kind of open electoral democracy and accountable government that his group campaigns for.

While the current regime is wracked by corruption, he says, “the government itself will not stay. But the state itself, the structures, is something permanent.”

Faced with a slew of botched projects and profiteering scandals, the US Congress recently passed legislation aimed at expanding oversight of USAID reconstruction funds and improving coordination with Haitian agencies.

Watchdog groups have welcomed the measure, but the damage wrought by past mismanagement may be irrevocable.

According to the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR), of the US$1.38 billion dollars in USAID funds Washington has poured into the recovery effort, “just 0.9 per cent has gone directly to Haiti organizations, while 56.6 per cent has gone to firms located inside the Beltway (Washington DC, Virginia and Maryland).”

USAID has claimed that many subcontractors of the federally contracted firms are local businesses, so actual local involvement is much greater.

But the agency has consistently refused to disclose supposedly “proprietary” information about local sub-grantees. Without full transparency, CEPR concludes, “it is impossible to determine the true extent of local participation in US assistance programs based on the information that is currently available.”

 

Female workers pay the price

Many Haitian activists agree that the recovery effort has been dysfunctional but they also view the failures so far as a product of a corrupt international agenda.

In a recent Boston Review essay, CEPR researcher Jake Johnston described the Caracol Industrial Park, an export manufacturing venture funded with Clinton Foundation funds, as a case study in botched humanitarianism.

Plans to construct surrounding ports and infrastructure, “have been delayed and plagued by cost overruns,” and the harsh labor conditions have only reproduced the system of exploitation in place prior to the disaster. Johnston concludes, “A revolving door between NGOs, development companies, and the US government has entrenched the system so deeply that any movement for change will be long and difficult.”

The women who work inside Caracol have paid the price.

A recent report published by POHDH, based on surveys of Caracol workers in late 2013, found that the women garment workers suffer “extremely difficult conditions, inadequate pay and [lack] any form of effective social protection.”

They also had minimal union representation and were exposed to wage theft and sexual harassment at work—reflecting an overarching climate of gender-based violence that has roiled through post-quake Haiti.

Despite recent minimum wage hikes, garment workers typically earn between US$5 and US$7 a day, far less than what’s needed to support a family’s basic needs in Port-au-Prince.

To Mortime and other activists in Haiti, breaking the country out of the cycle of aid and impoverishment requires a rethinking of the relationship between human rights and economic security.

Both US lawmakers and the Haitian government constantly stress the need to bring “security” to Haiti’s streets, citing the prevalence of crime and disorder.

But POHDH sees real security as a project of democratic governance, not the brutality and aggression for which Haiti’s current security apparatus is known.

Alongside a notoriously corrupt criminal justice system, the UN’s security operation, MINUSTAH, still patrols Haiti’s communities and is widely viewed as an occupying force.

The public’s resentment continues to grow as the UN continues to ignore widespread evidence that its troops are responsible for introducing the massive cholera outbreak of 2010 to 2011.

A humane approach to public security, Mortime says, begins with strengthening civil society from the ground up.

Expanding access to education is key, as is the establishment of an independent judiciary and clean elections as a check on the political ruling class.

Beyond public policing, he says, "I’m also talking about social justice. We have to create stability inside the country. If we don’t resolve the issue of political instability, we will not be able to resolve the economic issues, let alone the social issues.”

It seems extraordinary that after witnessing so many disasters, human-made and natural, befall his country, Mortime still has faith that a democratic republic can be raised from the ruins of the quake.

But he bears in mind that the country’s whole history is rooted in the people’s resilience through waves of political upheaval and colonial dominion.

“We paid a historical consequence for being first black republic in the hemisphere, in the world,” he says.

“We are the poorest country, perhaps, but we are also the country that has the most beautiful history when it comes to independence, and the imperialists will never forgive us for that.... I think all these problems are linked to imperialism.”

 

An unabridged version of this article first appeared in The Nation. Copyright © 2014 The Nation. Used by permission of Agence Global.