In a February 17 article “Venezuela’s Renegade Aid” published in the Huffington Post,
freelance journalist Patrick Adams implies that there is something
untoward and problematic about the Venezuelan aid effort in earthquake
ravaged Haiti.
Venezuela’s main crime appears to be its non-participation in the UN
coordinated “cluster system” which Adams argues “has worked fairly
well” – never mind that the UN has been an occupying force in Haiti
since the United States engineered overthrow of democratically elected
President Jean Bertrand Aristide in 2004 and never mind that John
Holmes, the head of the U.N. Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs, himself heavily criticised the implementation of
the “cluster strategy” in a confidential email leaked on February 16.
“One month into the response, only a few clusters have fully
dedicated cluster coordinators, information management focal points and
technical support capacity, all of which are basic requirements for the
efficient management of a large scale emergency operation,” Holmes said.
Despite the clearly logistical nightmare of organising such a large
scale relief operation Adams argues that it is “one group -- such as
the National Armed Fores [sic] of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela”
that is creating “problems for everyone else.”
Adams’ main source for the supposedly problematic behaviour of the
Venezuelans is Dr. Tiffany Keenan, “founder and president of Haiti
Village Health, which oversees the supply and distribution of private
aid from its offices in the airport,” in the port city of Jacmel. As it
turns out Adams is “embedded” in Keenan’s guesthouse in Jacmel (though
he doesn’t mention that in the article).
“The Venezuelans haven't showed up at a single meeting," complained Dr. Tiffany Keenan,” Adams writes.
"We were all sitting there the other day and someone said, 'Did you
hear they just put a bunch of tents in Pinchinat?' Nobody had had any
idea they were there. We still don't know how many doctors they have or
how long they'll be there." Keenan continues.
However, as Adams later admits, the Venezuelans are coordinating
their work directly with the Haitian government (which is ultimately
responsible for deciding “how aid is coordinated and who manages its
distribution among populations in need”) and in the case of the
Pinchinat camp in Jacmel, the Venezuelans were brought there directly
by the local mayor’s office, so it’s pretty clear that some people had
an idea they were there.
As one perceptive commentator on Adams’ article wrote, “So they
chose to work through the local government instead of the
North-American run “cluster” system. I guess that makes them renegades.”
It later also emerges that the whole story seems to be concocted
around a communication problem as the cluster system meetings are
conducted only in French and English, whereas the Venezuelans speak
Spanish.
In fact, Adam’s article is one big whine about the Venezuelan aid
effort, implying that it is uncooperative, inept and inefficient.
However, occasionally facts on the ground force Adams to take a
reality check: “When the Venezuelans first arrived, Pinchinat was a sea
of makeshift huts assembled with sticks, bed sheets and scraps of
plastic -- whatever could be salvaged from the collapsed homes that
many of its residents had fled. Within days, some fifty Venezuelan
soldiers in forest green fatigues had erected more than a hundred
40-foot, green canvas tents with "U.S." stamped on the side.”
But again Adams finds something to complain about; he mocks Maximo
Tampoa, a 25-year-old engineer in the Venezuelan Civil Defense and
another Venezuelan Capt. Chapparo for spray painting the red, yellow
and blue colours of the Venezuelan flag on the tents provided by
Venezuela and chides them for not knowing that more than two centuries
ago “on March 12, 1806, the "Generalísimo" Francisco de Miranda,
predecessor of the revolutionary leader Simon Bolivar, whose vision of
a unified South America has become Chavez's own, raised the original
Venezuelan tricolor on the ship Leander, anchored at the time in Jacmel
Bay.”
Then he goes on to list a string of complaints: the tents are hot,
and there are no floors. That’s it! That’s the problem with the
Venezuelan aid effort!
The Venezuelans haven’t occupied the country militarily, blocked aid
supplies from arriving at the airport, tried to impose unfair
conditions on reconstruction loans or attempted to kidnap 33 Haitian
children a la Laura Silsby and the Central Valley Baptists, BUT…. their tents are hot!
So what are the Venezuelans really doing in Haiti?
Venezuela has certainly differentiated its approach to what
Venezuelan Foreign Minister Nicholas Maduro described as “the
hegemonic, abusive form in which U.S. military has sought to address
the issue of Haiti.”
After the disaster struck on January 12, Venezuela was the first
country to send aid, with an advance team of doctors, search and rescue
experts as well as food, water, medical supplies, and rescue equipment
arriving in Port-au-Prince on the morning of January 13.
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez also announced the cancellation of
Haiti’s US$ 295 million debt to Venezuela on January 25, (a fact which
Adams does not mention). In addition to thousands of tonnes of food aid
Venezuela has also sent 225,000 barrels of diesel fuel and gasoline and
Chavez has pledged “all the free fuel that Haiti needs.”
The Venezuelan government has donated 30,000 tents and sent more
than 10,000 tonnes of food to Haiti and has pledged to continue
shipments of food aid and supplies. Collection points have been set up
all around the country for donations to ship to Haiti and Chavez’s
United Socialist Party of Venezuela has organised dozens of concerts
and fundraising events to help out with the Haiti reconstruction effort.
As part of a broader effort in collaboration with the member
countries of the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our Americas
(ALBA), which also includes Cuba, Bolivia, Nicaragua, Ecuador,
Dominica, St Vincent and the Grenadines, and Antigua and Barbuda,
Venezuela and the ALBA countries also pledged $120 million to help
reconstruction efforts, and together with the Union of South American
Nations (UNSAUR) Venezuela has also agreed to contribute to a $300
million fund, with each country donating according to their GDP.
Venezuela has also set up three “community camps”, that together
house 3,900 Haitians whose homes were destroyed by the earthquake - the
Simón Bolívar and Alexander Petión camps in Leogane, which each house
1,200 people, and the Francisco de Miranda camp in Jacmel, which houses
1,500 people.
The camps provide medical attention, trauma counselling, food,
access to sanitation, adult literacy programs as well as sports,
education, and music classes and other recreational activities for
children. Venezuela’s ambassador to Haití, Pedro Canino, said
Venezuela’s 520 aid personnel are also working directly with 219
grassroots social organisations in Haiti to distribute food aid and
other supplies to the local communities. The Venezuelans are also
helping with reconstruction efforts, digging latrines, clearing rubble,
building houses and schools.
Rather than living in hotels or guesthouses like many other aid
workers, the Venezuelans are living and working side by side with the
Haitian people. Jean H. Charles MSW, JD Executive Director of AINDOH
Inc, wrote of the Simón Bolívar camp in Leogane in Caribbean Net News
on February 17, “The Bolivarian tent city, is well organized, its a
transitional model that should be replicated; the Venezuelan soldiers
living with the refugees are social workers, teachers, cooks and
community organizers.”
The Venezuelan plan is to work with local communities to multiply
the camps to extend access to thousands more people in need. The Jacmel
camp is scheduled to be handed over to a team of Cuban doctors, while
the Venezuelans will go back to Port-au-Prince, to work on constructing
additional camps. The approach of the Venezuelan aid effort is not to
impose conditions or win lucrative reconstruction contracts, but rather
to help provide Haitians with tools with which they can organise and
empower their communities for their own sovereign development.
Of course, efforts can always be improved, and unlimited solidarity
with the people of Haiti is urgently necessary right now, but
Venezuela, a small underdeveloped country has attempted, in a spirit of
internationalism to step up to the challenge to the best of its ability
and resources. As Chavez said, “Venezuela’s aid is modest but it is
done with a big heart.”
So, rather than attacking the efforts of poor countries engaged in
genuine solidarity to alleviate the suffering of the Haitian people
perhaps Adams could better spend his time questioning the imperialist
intentions of his own country that has sent more than 15,000 soldiers
to occupy Haiti, which, incidentally, is thought to have potentially
massive untapped reserves of oil and gas. He could also investigate
where the billions of dollars in international aid is actually going,
what conditions the IMF is imposing on Haiti’s reconstruction loans or
what Christian missionaries – who, as with all colonising projects are
an essential part of the “hearts and minds” strategy to maintain
subordination to Western imperialist and capitalist interests - are
really getting up to?
Maybe he could even start with the Christian relief and missions
organisation, ORA International, of which Keenan’s NGO, Haiti Village
Health, is an affiliate. According to the website Ministrywatch.com,
whose stated aim is “educating and empowering donors to support
Christian Ministries,” ORA International’s “transparency grade” is “F”
and the website posts a “Donor Alert” on the ORA International profile
with a warning “Non-Transparent Ministries: Are they Faithful in the
Small Things?”
Venezuelan Analysis