Haiti: 'earthquake relief' helps build luxury hotel
The Clinton Bush Fund, which former presidents Bill Clinton (1993-2001) and George W. Bush (2001-2009) established shortly after Haiti's January 2010 earthquake, is closing down on Dec. 31, the group's vice president for marketing and communications said on Dec. 7. The fund will have disbursed all of the $54.4 million it raised, she indicated. The organization says on its website that its goal was "to assist the Haitian people in building their own country back better." The group says it has "[d]irectly created or sustained 7,350 jobs and counting" and "[d]irectly trained 20,050 people and counting." (New York Times, Dec. 7, from AP)
One of the fund's projects—the Oasis Hotel in Pétionville, a suburb southeast of Port-au-Prince—opened on Dec. 12 with a soiree and 800 invitation-only guests. Munching hors-d'oeuvres and sipping "free-flowing wine," the Miami Herald's Jacqueline Charles wrote, the participants observed "the bamboo, locally grown orchids and sexy white furniture that lined the expansive courtyard." The 128-room hotel cost $35 million to build; $2 million was provided by the Clinton Bush Fund. President Michel Martelly ("Sweet Micky") called the hotel "a symbol of the new Haiti."
According to Tourism Minister Stephanie Balmir Villedrouin, Martelly's government has approved a $161 million hotel project that will bring a total of 1,200 new hotel rooms to the country next year. A 106-room Best Western and an El Rancho with 72 rooms and 13 apartments are set to open in the coming months; Comfort Suites and Marriott are also planning hotels in Port-au-Prince. (Miami Herald, Dec. 13)
On Dec. 10, two days before the Oasis opening, the Force for Reflection and Action on Housing (FRAKKA), a grassroots housing coalition, issued a press release charging that Port-au-Prince area mayors, police agents, justices of the peace and property owners—some with questionable land titles—were continuing forcible evictions of people left homeless by the 2010 earthquake. Some 150 families were threatened, according to the group, which said the displaced persons camps at risk were Vilambeta at Caradeux in the northeastern suburb of Tabarre; Camp Gaston Margron, in the Mariani Zone of Carrefour, southwest of the capital; Fortuna Guery in Port-au-Prince; and Camp Cr3, at Delmas 60, a neighborhood in the Delmas commune east of downtown Port-au-Prince. (AlterPresse, Haiti, Dec. 10)
Some 360,000 people are still living in the camps or other temporary shelters almost three years after the earthquake—4% of Haiti's population, according to Johan Peleman, head of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in Haiti. "There's still not enough construction of new housing going on," Peleman told the Reuters wire service's AlertNet, which notes that "just over half the $6.04 billion in aid to Haiti pledged by donors from 2010 to 2012 has been disbursed." (AlertNet, Dec. 13)
From Weekly News Update on the Americas, Dec. 16.
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