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Haitian Ten Year
Rebuilding Plan - $3B
By Jeff Swicord
January 27, 2010
On Monday, international donors gathered in Montreal to confer on
rebuilding Haiti and agreed on a ten year rebuilding plan that the
Haitian government said would cost three billion dollars. The city of
Carrefour is outside of Port-au-Prince, and was the epicenter of the
earthquake.
Street scene in
Carrefour, Haiti
France Joseph is lucky to be alive. He lives in Carrefour, the epicenter
of the earthquake that reduced much of Haiti to rubble. He was in
downtown Port-au-Prince on business when the first tremors hit. When he
returned home, he found most of his neighborhood leveled, his modest
house in ruins. "I am empty handed. I have nowhere to go," he said.
Carrefour means crossroads. The city, near the sea, got its name from
the dozen roads that intersect here. It's fitting given that France
Joseph and other residents of Carrefour are also at a crossroads. They
must decide whether to stay and rebuild their community or move on.
Iloisel Jose, who lives in the U.S. part of the year says he's not sure.
"If you are the guy to be living 25, 30, 40 years to build one house.
You gone in one second, no money now, no job, how them going to build.
You can't do it again," he said.
Lazarre
Vereau is standing next to what is left of his drugstore. He is combing
through the rubble, salvaging whatever personal belongings he can find.
He doesn't think he will rebuild right away. "I am going to watch
everyone else first. When somebody else starts to rebuild, then I will
follow," he said.
There is no question Carrefour will need outside help.
When we asked Saint Croix Fils, president of the local Rotary Club,
about Carrefour's predicament, he offered a word of caution with this
Haitian proverb: a goat with too many masters dies in the sun.
Haiti, he said, has had too many masters, too many international
organizations promising big things but not delivering.
He wants one organization, one donor country, to focus on Carrefour, and
see it through to the end. |