If you want to keep up with Haiti these days, the Bible might be a better source than the newspaper, because the country seems to get hit by one plague after another.
Haiti recently saw torrential rains, flooding and landslides that killed more than 50 people and forced tens of thousands from their homes in its southwest peninsula. That same region was also struck by a magnitude 5.5 earthquake that killed at least four people.
On the latest edition of The South Florida Roundup, WLRNās Tim Padgett spoke with Yvans Morisseau, a community advocacy liaison for Miami-Dade County who chairs the nonprofit Haitian-American Emergency Relief Committee. He hails from the peninsula that has been hardest hit by the disasters.
āWe find it necessary to train people to protect themselves, to see how they can mitigate and help themselves,ā Morisseau said. āIn other words, we say, āLet us help Haiti help itself.āā
The most affected zone, Haitiās southwest peninsula, is also one of the hardest for relief aid to get to, especially since the violent gangs that control so much of the country are out to hijack whatever moves into that area.
āSo if you have to bring some assistance, some aid or anything to Haiti, you have to really spend the good time and money to strategize,ā Morisseau added.
During a visit to the Bahamas this week, Vice President Kamala Harris said that the U.S. will spend an additional $54 million in Haiti to help it recover from all these natural and criminal calamities.
Morisseau expressed skepticism about the moneyās effectiveness, especially if its use doesnāt involve input from Haitians and Haitian Americans themselves.
āIn 2010 [for example] we had the earthquake in Haiti,ā Morisseau said. āBillions of dollars were dedicated to Haiti, and companies here in Miami-Dade County, I cannot recall or I cannot find anyā¦ that had received a project to help or rebuild or do anything in Haiti.ā
Harris also repeated the Biden Administrationās call for a multinational force to stabilize the country. Morisseau again expressed skepticism, but agreed that Haitiās current government is ineffectual at best.
āWe donāt have a government but we have people who are governing Haiti,ā Morisseau said. āTheir governance is not good, is not right.ā
During that same show, Padgett also discussed the unprecedented trial of the former school resource officer at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland and soccer superstar Lionel Messi coming to Miami.
To listen to the full episode, click here.