Sunday, September 21, 2008

Haiti Slips Into Deeper Food Crisis

Four storms this season have wiped out most of the crops


Chalin Sejour, 28, sits in front of her destroyed house with her belongs covered in mud in Gonaives, Haiti, Wednesday.

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - Four tropical storms have wiped out most of Haiti's food crops and damaged irrigation systems and pumping stations, raising the specter of acute hunger for millions in the impoverished country.

"The system of agriculture has been destroyed," Agriculture Minister Joanas Gue said. Aid agencies and diplomats also say Haiti desperately needs help to avert mass hunger.

Emergency aid has flowed in to people directly affected by Fay, Gustav, Hanna and Ike — storms that triggered flooding and killed at least 425 people in less than a month, including 194 in the critical rice-growing Artibonite Valley.



But the United Nations has raised less than 2 percent of a critical $108 million fundraising appeal, said Stephanie Bunker, a spokeswoman for the world body's Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Another $18 million has been pledged but not delivered.

And much, much more is needed, with farms damaged or destroyed across the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere.

"This will take billions of dollars. This is not something small," U.S. Agency for International Development Administrator Henrietta Fore said.

Schools that were supposed to open in early September still are filled with refugees fighting over scraps of food aid. Much of Gonaives, the nation's fourth largest city, remains flooded and without electricity. Malaria and other diseases are beginning to spread.

"The scope of this is frankly unimaginable in many countries," U.S. Ambassador Janet Sanderson said. "A lot of the progress of the last couple of years has been swept away by these waters."

The U.S. government is sending $29 million in food aid and humanitarian assistance, and countries including Colombia have flown in food and clothing. U.N. agencies have delivered food to more than 240,000 people, aided by soldiers of its 9,000-strong peacekeeping force and military ships like the USS Kearsarge and Canada's HMCS St. John.

Haiti always struggled to feed its people. Now, it's getting to be impossible.

On a helicopter tour on Tuesday, Fore saw that flood waters still covered much of Haiti's rice-growing region. Crops were covered with brown mud or lay crushed in ruined fields stretching far as the eye could see.

Gue, the agriculture minister, estimates that 60 percent of this year's food harvest has been wiped out by the storms, which hit just as farmers were preparing to collect corn, plantains and yams from their fields. The fall rice harvest was lost as well.

The damage could be felt for years — mountain topsoil, already loosened by rampant deforestation, washed out to sea. Hundreds of irrigation basins, canals and pumping stations were damaged, and about 10,000 tons (9,000 metric tons) of discounted fertilizer distributed to farmers disappeared.

Altogether, Gue estimated the storms caused $180 million in damage to Haiti's agricultural sector.

Source: Sun-Sentinel.Com

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