06th
March 2010
Disaster
need more than prayers
The
massive earthquakes in Haiti and Chile within
six weeks of each other, on January12 and February
27 respectively, revealed the limited capacity
of Caribbean Community (CARICOM) countries to
respond to disasters on this scale.
To date, CARICOM countries have not been able
to mobilize support for Chile and have virtually
left the problem to be tackled by the Chilean
government, the United States of America, better-off
Latin American nations and the international
institutions. CARICOM countries simply do not
have the resources in any form to cope with
massive disasters within their own member states,
let alone to provide help to other countries.
In this regard, CARICOM countries need to thank
God that the 7.0 earthquake that buckled Haiti
did not extend into Jamaica.
Nonetheless, high praise should be given to
CARICOM countries for their efforts, at both
the level of governments and the public, to
help Haiti. In proportion to their capacity,
many of them have been very generous.
Barbados has now emerged as the country which,
on a per capita basis, has pledged the most
to Haiti’s relief and reconstruction.
Prime Minister David Thompson has revealed that
the Barbados government is donating US$1 million
to Haiti, the same figure as the governments
of the two countries at either end of CARICOM’s
economic scale - oil-rich Trinidad and Tobago,
and Guyana, the poorest country, in per capita
income terms, after Haiti in the region.
While Guyana’s contribution was exemplary,
the donation of Barbados is outstanding for
not only has the government pledged US$1 million,
but it has been shouldering the costs for the
operations of the Regional Security System (RSS)
that has provided much needed security and other
services to Haiti. Barbados shares the RSS with
six island-territories of the Organization of
Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) but Thompson
revealed that “no other contributions
have been forthcoming” from other states.
CARICOM countries gave as much as they could.
They did so directly and through the Caribbean
Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA).
But, at the end of the day, large though the
contribution was in relation to the means of
these countries, it was a drop in the Ocean
measured against the scale of Haiti’s
needs. Haiti required the large scale assistance
of countries such as the United States, Canada,
France, Brazil and the international institutions
like the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB).
In early March at a meeting of CARICOM finance
ministers, Secretary-General, Edwin Carrington,
declared that the region “cannot fail
to take cognizance of the near similar situation
(to Haiti) which has befallen Chile.”
He urged assistance ‘to the best of our
ability at this time”.
The number of dead and injured in Chile was
not as great as in Haiti even though the 8.8
tremor was much stronger than the earthquake
that bowed Haiti. Nonetheless, as this commentary
is being written, the United Nations Office
for the coordination of Humanitarian Affairs,
reports that 723 people were killed and 2 million
(about 10 per cent of the population) have been
made homeless and are walking the streets. Six
regions were declared as zones of catastrophe.
But CARICOM countries are already over-stretched
in Haiti. It is doubtful that any of them, except
perhaps for Trinidad and Tobago, could make
anything more than a token gesture of assistance
to Chile.
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