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Following is an
article that appeared recently on the website for World Vision,
another organization working to benefit children. It describes the
consequences of the hurricanes that visited Haiti at the end of the summer
of 2008. We hope you will find it of interest.
United States Foundation
for the
Children of HaitiHaiti's
hunger woes compounded by the unforgiving force of four hurricanes
The poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, already reeling from the
food crisis, is slammed by floods from Hurricanes Fay, Gustav, Hanna, and
Ike.
September 2008
By Jasmine Vendredi and Peter Warski, World Vision Communications

Residents of Mirebelais, Haiti, canoe past a bridge that collapsed from
the force of Hurricane Ike. Haiti has been pounded by four recent
hurricanes, which have made the food crisis even worse in this deeply
impoverished country.
Photo ©2008 Stephen Matthews/World Vision
Fanny, 15, doesn't exert any energy during her short breaks at school.
She needs to save it up to focus on her studies during class — a hard
thing to do when her stomach has been empty for several days.
Even during the lessons at school, her concern is focused mainly on
whether there will be food in her house when she gets home. The prospects
are usually grim: Her father earns a meager $20 per month, barely enough
to provide a few days' worth of food for Fanny's seven-member family
during that period of time.
Fanny's story is sadly reflective of a harsh reality facing most
Haitian children — their families simply don't have the economic resources
necessary to cover the rapidly rising cost of food. Following flooding
from four powerful hurricanes there, however, the hunger situation is
quickly devolving from bad to unbearable.
Adding insult to injury
" The only good news here is
that Hurricane Ike's path was far enough north that Haiti did not take
another direct hit," said Wesley Charles, World Vision's national director
in Haiti, speaking of the fourth storm to strike the island country in
less than a month. "But the rains from Ike have made it even more
difficult for aid workers to get into some of the worst flooded areas.
People are becoming increasingly desperate."
Hurricanes Ike, Gustav, Hanna, and Fay, which all struck Haiti within a
period of about three weeks, have wiped out bridges and roads, postponed
school for at least a month, and perhaps worst of all, damaged the next
mango harvest, Haiti's only viable export crop.
According to reports, some 10,000 people were crammed into 115 shelters in
the beleaguered city of Gonaive following the passage of Ike, and only 10
of those shelters had food. In the region of Jean Denis, dirty floodwater
worsened the situation for desperate families.
"Children played in the filthy water," said Steve Matthews, World Vision's
emergency communications manager. "Women were washing clothes and dishes
in overflowing streams. The farmland was absolutely drenched. Everything
has become waterlogged, making it nearly impossible to cook, even for
those who were able to salvage some of their rice."
Food crisis intensified
Even before the flooding, a stable food supply was out of reach to most
Haitian families, like Fanny's. Spiraling global food prices — caused by a
variety of factors, including fuel costs — have dealt devastation to this
poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, where many live on less than $2
per day.

Floodwaters in Haiti's Central Plateau region reach the rooftops of
buildings. The destructive force of four consecutive hurricanes is
expected to make the already severe food crisis in this country even
worse.
©2008 Yves Beauge/World Vision
But the four recent hurricanes have delivered a near-knockout punch.
"Bread is scarce and will soon be gone, and much of people's stored brown
rice got wet when Hurricane Hanna went by," explained World Vision relief
coordinator Elvire Douglas.
In partnership with other
humanitarian agencies, World Vision is scaling up its relief efforts in
Haiti following the flooding. The top priority is to reach affected
families cut off by the hurricane damage and deliver emergency food aid
and supplies to those who need it most. But additional resources are
needed to effectively respond to such a critical situation.
A harsh reality
Meanwhile, for children like
Fanny across Haiti, the clock is ticking. Her exhaustion and physical harm
at the hands of malnutrition are observable in her appearance.
"When we don't have the money to buy food, we just take a bath and go to
bed, expecting what the following morning will bring," said Evana, Fanny's
mother, who struggles to explain the problems facing her five children and
husband. They're issues similar to what she faced as a child.
Certainly, Evana is one mother who doesn't want her children to face the
same hardships as adults that she has. With conditions in Haiti as they
are these days, she is likely one parent among many sharing that
sentiment.
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