FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Haiti recovery: No room for complacency, no time for blame, says Church World Service
Advocates in Congressional briefings urge, ”Release more aid, include Haitian civil society and women in nation’s
rebuilding”
Washington, D.C. – Friday, January 27, 2012 -- Representatives of Haitian civil society organizations met with members
of Congress and representatives of the U.S. Agency for International Development and the State Department (USAID) in
Washington this week to address persistent problems in Haiti two years after the country’s devastating earthquake.
The series of Congressional briefings were part of a Haiti Advocacy Week, co-sponsored by Church World Service (CWS) as
part of a coalition of U.S. organizations who are members of the Haiti Advocacy Working Group.
Advocacy week participants made it clear that the situation in Haiti leaves no room for complacency. For the 600,000 and
more people still living in camps and even for those who have left, there is still an unacceptably high level of hunger
and malnutrition, suffering, risk and insecurity.
In the midst of this urgency, one focus of the Congressional meetings centered on problems connected with aid efforts
and who was at fault. According to Jasmine Huggins, CWS senior advocacy officer for Haiti, “while it is vital to analyze
what can be learned from the past and how aid delivery to those in need can be improved, now is not the time to try to
cast blame.”
Rather, she said, members of the humanitarian community must now redouble their efforts, continue support for grassroots
organizations that are meeting the needs of the poorest, continue pressing for the release of international aid to
Haiti, and urge all departments of the U.S. government to insist that the Haitian government adopt rights-based
approaches in their programs, and prioritize the most vulnerable.
According to Huggins, CWS is particularly concerned that women and children continue still to endure hunger and
malnutrition and insecurity. “This week,” said Huggins, “Haitian partners told us that women still in camps and those
evicted from them urgently require safe and secure housing so that their risk of sexual violence can be minimized as
quickly as possible.” Lack of food and employment forces the hungry to sell sex for money to support their families and
themselves, she said.
CWS emphasizes that women need access to sustainable incomes so that they can take care of their families and so that
their daughters don’t have to sell sex to survive.
Colette Lespinasse from Support Group for Refugees and Repatriated Persons (GARR) says that “various ministries still
don’t have a plan to house women or consider them a priority. The U.S. government must urge the Haitian government to
address women’s concerns in all their plans.”
CWS and the group of Haitian advocates said houses must urgently be built so that women can be safe. Police officers
need more resources and immediate training so that they can perform their role in protection. All government ministries
need to understand the most urgent needs of women, and foster the full inclusion of women and civil society
organizations alike in Haiti’s redevelopment and in their programs across the board, not just in the Women’s Ministry.
Co-sponsors of the Washington advocacy week, in addition to Church World Service, included Haiti Action Working Group
(HAWG) members: Action Aid USA, Alternative Change/Chans Alternativ, American Jewish World Service, Center for Economic
and Policy Research, Center for Gender and Refugee Studies-University of California Hasting College of Law,
Environmental Justice Initiative for Haiti, Fonkoze USA, Gender Action, Grassroots International, Institute for Justice
and Democracy in Haiti, International Rescue Committee, Jesuit Refugee Service/USA, Latin America Working Group, Li, Li,
Li, Read, MADRE, Mennonite Central Committee U.S.-Washington Office, National Lawyers Guild-Environmental Justice
Center, Oxfam America, Partners in Health, The Andora Project, The Haiti Fund at the Boston Foundation, TransAfrica
Forum, United Methodist Church, General Board of Church and Society, Unitarian Universalist Service Committee and
University of Miami School of Law-Human Rights Clinic.
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