UN Provides 5 Million Dollars in Humanitarian Aid to Haiti

UNITED NATIONS – The United Nations Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) Friday announced that it is providing five million US dollars to Haiti as the country responds to humanitarian needs triggered by gang violence.

miHELA member of the Peruvian Battalion serving with MINUSTAH guards a facility on the edge of Cité Soleil and Cité Militaire in Port-Au-Prince, Haiti, allowing people to come in and register. (UN Photo)The assistance comes amidst the killing of hundreds of people since July in clashes between gangs in Haiti’s Cité Soleil, said the UN humanitarian agency (OCHA) spokesperson, Jens Laerke.

Many others have been trapped in the fighting, as gang control over the highways continues to grow.  This has cut off their access to drinking water, food and health care.

“Overall, we estimate that nearly 280,000 people are affected by this situation” Laerke added.

With a current estimated population of around 300,000, Cité Soleil is one of the most deprived communes in Port-au-Prince and its humanitarian whose development needs were huge even before the current upsurge in violence.

The UN has said that between eighth and 17th July, over 471 people were killed, injured or unaccounted for. It said serious incidents of sexual violence against women and girls, as well as the gang recruitment of boys have also been reported.

Around 3,000 people have fled their homes, including hundreds of unaccompanied children, while at least 140 houses have been destroyed or burnt down.

Last month, Humanitarian Coordinator Ulrika Richardson called on all parties to end the deadly violence and ensure open a humanitarian corridor to Cité Soleil, describing the needs as “immense” and “growing,” as a result of poverty, a lack of basic services, and a recent spike in violence.

A high level of insecurity is compromising humanitarian access to affected people, as well as to basic services such as health and education for between one million to 1.5 million people trapped in gang-controlled neighborhoods, according to the OCHA spokesperson

Laerke pointed out that although “a small amount,” it is “a critical amount of money right now”.

The CERF allocation will help humanitarian agencies increase their responses, and funding through the UN Children’s fund (UNICEF) and the World Food Program (WFP) will provide food, drinking water, health care, mental health and education support to more than 100,000 people in total.

To assist an estimated 4.9 million Haitians, or about 43 percent of the total population this year, the Haiti humanitarian response plan, is asking US$373 million, but, Laerke, said it is only “14 percent funded”.

CERF enables humanitarian responders to deliver critical aid wherever crises strike. Since March 2006, it has enabled humanitarian partners to deliver over $5.5 billion in life-saving assistance in over 100 countries and territories.

Laerke explained that following an injection of CERF money, “other donors follow because it comes with a message that this is critical lifesaving interventions we need now”.

Meanwhile, a year after a devastating 7.2 magnitude earthquake struck southwestern Haiti, and three weeks before the beginning of a new academic year, UNICEF warned that more than 250,000 children lack access to adequate schools.

Insecurity and an absence of funding have delayed their reconstruction, the UN agency had said in a statement.

At the end of last year, UNICEF had requested through its 2022 Humanitarian Appeal, $97 million to reach 950,000 people, including 520,000 children in Haiti.

To date, only 30 percent of that funding has been received – threatening aid delivery for the most vulnerable in the country, the agency warned.