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How Will Recent Political Instability Shape Haiti’s Earthquake Response?
Parts of Haiti were reduced to rubble by a powerful earthquake that hit the impoverished nation on Aug. 14, 2021, resulting in a death toll that has to nearly 1,500 with many more bodies expected to be recovered in the days to come.
The devastating temblor came just weeks after the —an event that underlined the precarious political and security environment in modern-day Haiti.
Louise Comfort, an , has firsthand experience helping Haiti recover from tragedy, having worked to build a stronger program of community resilience in the country after the 2010 earthquake. She answered question from The Conversation U.S. questions on how the Caribbean nation will respond to the latest natural disaster.
1. How do the recent crises in stability of the Haitian government affect the nation’s ability to respond to this earthquake?
The assassination of President Moïse on July 7, 2021, marked the culmination of a series of challenges to his authority as president and the capacity of his administration to lead the country. His death surfaced a , Claude Joseph and Ariel Henry, both of whom claimed the office of prime minister. This dispute was resolved on July 19 when . But the crisis of responding to a major earthquake poses a major test to Henry’s leadership, coming just a few weeks after he stepped into the role.
The demands on the government for strong, decisive action in response to the earthquake are immediate. The have limited capacity for medical services, search and rescue efforts, and infrastructure repair after . Aid will need to come from outside the small cities hit hardest by the quake—either from the capital of Port-au-Prince, from other nations in the Caribbean region, or the larger international community.
Henry will need to manage the delivery of search and rescue teams, medical staff and supplies, transportation, and clean water from sources within Haiti as well as internationally. It is a big challenge as he seeks to secure the confidence of the damaged nation after only weeks in office.
2. What lessons can be learned from the 2010 earthquake in Haiti that killed an estimated 220,000 people?
As the principal investigator for a research team on crisis decision making in Haiti after , I believe two lessons are key.
First, it is crucial to involve Haitians in designing and managing the delivery of assistance and relief supplies in their own country. Regrettably, this was largely not the case in 2010, when international nongovernmental organizations met with good intentions, but to implement in practice.
While Haiti needs outside help from the international community to respond to the disaster, only Haitians understand the needs of their own communities and the local social networks that can best deliver aid. In Haiti, one of the , with its network of volunteers and service organizations that know the neighborhoods and are trusted by residents. If engaged at the outset, this network can provide humanitarian services to local neighborhoods more effectively and efficiently than international agencies working separately.
The second vital lesson is to support the work of local and international scientists in assessing the .
This means continuing to build a geological survey in Haiti to map earthquake faults and areas of potential seismic risk. Haiti is vulnerable to multiple hazards— earthquakes, hurricanes, floods, tsunamis, and sea level rise.
Understanding the science that underlies these hazards will enable Haitian scientists and governmental agencies to develop viable plans to rebuild damaged cities and infrastructure in sustainable, resilient ways.
3. Can you explain the idea of cascading crises and how it has played a role in Haiti over much of the nation’s history?
The concept of is like dominoes falling—if one tips, the others, closely aligned, fall in sequence. In a country where the basic physical, political, economic, and social infrastructures are weak, but all rely in some way on each other, damage to one area from an earthquake—say, physical infrastructure of roads and bridges—damages other parts, such as transportation to bring commercial goods to market. This in turn holds back the economy, reducing employment, and harming social cohesion.
The difficulty for those planning for stability in Haiti is that while the physical infrastructure is the most visible when it is damaged, and may be seen as most in need of attention, the in making sure that roads and buildings are constructed to a standard that can withstand natural hazards in the first place. In other words, a stable government in Haiti is a crucial part of making the nation’s homes, hospitals, and schools more resilient to events like earthquakes.
4. What can other Caribbean nations, the U.S., and the wider international community do to help the long-term stabilization of Haiti?
A key component in Haiti’s instability has been the that have scarred life for many in the nation for decades, contributing to the country’s economic and political woes. And regional governments in the Caribbean, as well as the U.S. and other nations, can play a crucial role here.
Countering the cartels who use Haiti as an easy passage through which to smuggle drugs to Europe and North America will require an international effort. Collaborative international policies on customs regulations, updating, and maintaining access to international databases by border patrol units, and advanced use of technologies to identify and intercept drug trafficking are steps toward reducing this major hazard. This is an international problem that Haiti cannot manage alone, and curbing it would benefit all nations.
This article was originally published by . It has been republished here with permission.
Louise K. Comfort
is a known expert in decision-making in crisis, disaster preparedness, and the use of technology to inform managers operating under urgent conditions. Graduating with a PhD from Yale University, she engaged in field studies following 23 earthquakes in 15 countries and has authored multiple books.
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