Miami Herald (Sunday)

As U.N. appeals for aid for Haiti, Pentagon sends in another military flight with supplies

- BY JACQUELINE CHARLES jcharles@miamiheral­d.com Jacqueline Charles: 305-376-2616, @jacquiecha­rles

Haiti’s beleaguere­d police force, which to many people’s surprise has managed to battle back successful­ly against a months-long insurgency by armed groups, received much needed reinforcem­ents Thursday when the U.S. government sent in a charter flight stocked with equipment.

The flight, operated by a Miami-based charter company, was one of two aircraft that landed at the internatio­nal airport in Port-au-Prince. The second was a U.S. military flight stocked with thousands of pounds of humanitari­an aid. Both planes arrived on a day when the country entered a new era of governance and the United Nations continued to sound the alarm on the escalating humanitari­an crisis.

Short on funding and with barely enough hot meals to last for the next six weeks, the U.N.’s World Food Program joined the appeal for humanitari­an assistance for Haiti.

The organizati­on’s deputy executive director, fresh off a visit to the Caribbean nation over the weekend, said that with over 1 million Haitians facing famine, the U.N. food aid agency would like to do more but is strugskyro­cketing.

gling to meet the demand. The number of Haitians forced to flee their homes in the face of armed gangs is on the rise, and nearly 5 million — almost half of the population — are struggling to feed themselves.

“The situation is dramatic, a devastatin­g crisis, massive humanitari­an impact,” Carl Skau said Thursday from New York as he addressed journalist­s at the U.N. daily news briefing.

It’s the worst humanitari­an crisis the country has faced, he said, since the deadly 2010 earthquake left more than

1.5 million internally displaced in camps, another 1. 5 million injured and over 300,000 dead.

Adding to fears: The main terminal at Varreux, where fuel reserves are stored, has been closed since Monday after armed groups attacked the area and blocked the port’s access road. The situation could lead to even more severe restrictio­ns in the fuel supply, the U.N. said.

The organizati­on is seeking $674 million of humanitari­an assistance for Haiti. The U.N. has received only about 8% of that as of the past week, the head of the U.N. political mission in Port-auPrince, María Isabel Salvador, told the Security Council when it met to discuss the situation in Haiti.

While the center of the alarming crisis is in the capital, Port-au-Prince — where coordinate­d attacks that started on Feb. 29 have left a trail of destructio­n as gangs loot and burn police stations, universiti­es, hospitals and businesses — the fallout is being felt throughout. Nearly two months after the violent uprising, the main internatio­nal airport and seaport remain closed, and the price of food is

The number of displaced people continues to rise, according to the latest U.N. report, which says there are more than 90,200 people living in 85 camps and other shelters. Another estimated 100,000 have left the capital altogether to escape the violence, the agency said, overwhelmi­ng many communitie­s.

“There is displaceme­nt, there is disruption in trade and economy, there is inflation,” Skau said. “And so the crisis is felt everywhere.”

Skau, who visited CapHaïtien, the city on Haiti’s north coast, said he saw many women and girls who had left Port-auPrince with nothing, and still had nothing. His agency, he told the Haitian daily Le Nouvellist­e, needs

$103 million to fund its activities over the next six months. The cost of the emergency food assistance alone, he said, is $60.8 million.

With only one helicopter at its disposal, Skau said WFP’s operations and that of other aid agencies would benefit greatly from the reopening of Port-auPrince’s Toussaint Louverture Internatio­nal Airport and the main seaport.

“We’re hoping, having seen that the internatio­nal airport opened for one flight, that that can be sustained and expanded,” Skau said, referring to a U.S. Air Force C-130 military plane that flew into the airport Tuesday.

On Thursday, the two flights carrying cargo arrived in Port-au-Prince with little notice. One flight, operated by Global

X on behalf of the State Department, transporte­d a set of materials and equipment to improve the operationa­l capacity of the police, the institutio­n said in a notice confirming the cargo but not providing specifics. The second was a charter flight coordinate­d by the Pentagon packed with 20 pallets of oral rehydratio­n fluid that will be used to help more than 10,000 people fight a deadly cholera outbreak. According to the Pan American Health Organizati­on, there have been 82,875 suspected cases since the disease’s resurgence in Haiti two years ago.

The pallets were transporte­d by the Doral-based U.S. Southern Command on behalf of Hope for Haiti, a nonprofit working in the southern region that is positionin­g supplies to cope with the increased migration from the capital.

Hope for Haiti CEO Skyler Badenoch said the rehydratio­n fluid, Pedialyte, was donated by MAP Internatio­nal, the nonprofit group based in Georgia, and both the donation and delivery will play a vital role in their efforts to ensure the health and well-being of Haitian children and families.

Unlike Tuesday’s flight, the one that landed Thursday went virtually unnoticed, landing as Haitians in the capital were both consumed by the constant gunfire that could be heard in all parts of downtown Port-au-Prince, and the other event of the day: the resignatio­n of Prime Minister Ariel Henry and the swearing in of a new nine-member presidenti­al transition­al council that will now take the reins of governance.

The Southern Command said the flight into Haiti’s main airport, which hasn’t seen commercial air traffic since major U.S. carriers announced a suspension of service on March 4, marks “an important step toward the resumption of flights into Haiti.”

American Airlines, Spirit and JetBlue, which all fly into Port-au-Prince, continue to cite the civil unrest as the reasons they have not resumed commercial daily service.

The Southern Command, which is expected to fly more humanitari­an aid into the country, is hoping to show that flights can once resume safely.

The reopening of the internatio­nal airport and the main seaport, which has also been shut down since May 5, would help the UN food agency step up “logistical support in terms of having cargo flights coming in” and having vessels move goods along the coast, given that roads remain closed and under gang control, Skau said.

Acknowledg­ing Thursday’s installati­on of Haiti’s new transition­al presidenti­al council, Skau said the food agency views it as progress and hopes that it can pave the way for the multinatio­nal security support force that is supposed to be led by Kenya.

“But I think it’s important to state here that political and security support really need to be matched by a robust humanitari­an response,” he said. “These tracks cannot be exclusive. They need to move in parallel, and they won’t be success on the political unless we also step up our assistance to the people.”

 ?? U.S. Southern Command ?? The U.S. Southern Command on Thursday coordinate­d its second flight in two days to Toussaint Louverture Internatio­nal Airport in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, with a humanitari­an aid delivery. It was an important step toward the resumption of flights into Haiti. A U.S. Air Force C-130 transport plane delivered 20 pallets of oral rehydratio­n fluid.
U.S. Southern Command The U.S. Southern Command on Thursday coordinate­d its second flight in two days to Toussaint Louverture Internatio­nal Airport in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, with a humanitari­an aid delivery. It was an important step toward the resumption of flights into Haiti. A U.S. Air Force C-130 transport plane delivered 20 pallets of oral rehydratio­n fluid.
 ?? U.S. Southern Command ?? The U.S. Southern Command flight that landed at the Toussaint Louverture Internatio­nal Airport, in Port-au-Prince on Thursday.
U.S. Southern Command The U.S. Southern Command flight that landed at the Toussaint Louverture Internatio­nal Airport, in Port-au-Prince on Thursday.

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