AMY GOODMAN: But we are also joined in studio
by Kim Ives.
And it’s really important to talk not only
what’s happened in the United States, but
Hurricane Irma was the largest to cross the—was
the largest ever in the Atlantic.
The death toll from Hurricane Irma has reached
at least 27 in the Caribbean.
The number is expected to rise as rescuers
reach the hardest-hit areas.
Irma destroyed major parts of several Caribbean
islands, including Barbuda and Saint Martin.
Cuba also suffered major flooding in Havana
and other cities, but there were no reported
deaths.
The entrepreneur Richard Branson of Virgin
Airlines, among other things, has called for
a "Disaster Recovery Marshall Plan" for the
Caribbean.
Cuba has already sent more than 750 doctors
and other health workers to Antigua, Barbuda,
Saint Kitts, Nevis, Saint Lucia, the Bahamas,
Dominica and Haiti.
While Haiti avoided a direct hit from Irma,
the hurricane still caused substantial damage
in a country still recovering from the 2010
earthquake, as well as Hurricane Matthew last
year.
Irma displaced more than 100,000 Haitians
and destroyed crops in the north of the country.
So, Kim Ives joins Edwidge Danticat to talk
not only about what’s happened in Florida,
but what’s happened on the island of Haiti.
Kim, welcome to Democracy Now!
KIM IVES: Thanks, Amy.
Yeah, to the TPS question, you have about
close to 60,000 Haitians who are facing deportation
in January.
This is really a triple whammy, because most
of Haiti’s foreign exchange comes from remittances
from people working in the U.S., so that’s
going to be cut off.
They’re going to go into a country which
is debilitated, not only since the earthquake,
but since Hurricane Matthew.
And thirdly, a lot of their homes were damaged
in the flooding, in the winds that hit southern
Florida.
So, it’s a terrible situation for the Haitians
in Florida.
But, for Haiti, it was also bad, because you
have to take, 11 months ago, October 4th,
2016, the country, the southern peninsula,
was hit by a Category 4 hurricane.
That was Matthew.
And that destroyed 80 percent of the country’s—85
percent of the grains, of, you know, corn,
rice, sorghum, peas, millet, comes out of
that southern peninsula.
That was wiped out.
And 40 percent of the fruit comes out of that
part of the country.
And so it was the north that was picking up
the slack, if you will.
And that area has now been hit by Irma.
So, also, we should say that the south had
a three-year drought before the hurricane,
so there’s this sort of climactic whiplash
that’s happening.
You’re going from drought to these floods.
You know, the new climate is so volatile,
it’s really hurting a country like Haiti,
which in the past six years has gone from
the seventh to the third most climate-vulnerable
country.
AMY GOODMAN: And so, while Haiti did not get
a direct hit, because of its devastation,
it is impacted in a way most people are not
talking about.
They’re just saying, "Oh, it was a miss
for Haiti."
KIM IVES: Right, exactly.
But it’s a glancing blow, which was still
devastating for farmers in the north.
People had their crops wiped out by flooding
and by wind.
And it’s been just a terrible blow to a
country which is already food-insecure.
AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk about the massive
outbreak of cholera since the earthquake and
how that fits in here with what’s happening
now?
KIM IVES: Well, that’s the huge dilemma,
is that cholera was brought to the country
by the United Nations occupation troops, which
have occupied the country for the past 13
years.
They came in after the 2004 coup d’état
and were supposed to be there for six months.
Now, 13 years later, they’re supposedly
winding down to leave on October 15th.
This is not the case.
In fact, they’re just being replacing—they’re
just replacing soldiers with policemen and
women.
And so, you have a cholera epidemic, the worst
in the world, brought by Nepalese peacekeepers
back in October 2010, seven years ago.
And cholera, for those who don’t know, is
a waterborne disease.
It’s basically when sewage gets in your
drinking water.
So when you have this massive flooding, you’re
definitely going to see a huge spike in cholera
cases in Haiti.
AMY GOODMAN: And just to update us on the
cholera case, when you talk about peacekeepers,
you’re talking about U.N. peacekeepers.
KIM IVES: Yeah, quote-unquote "peacekeepers."
AMY GOODMAN: And the latest on the responsibility
the U.N. has taken for this massive outbreak?
How many people died?
KIM IVES: It’s about a million have been
affected.
Maybe 10,000 have died.
Those figures may be conservative, because
a lot of people are not registered who do
die.
But yeah, the cholera—the U.N. has taken
no responsibility, essentially.
They finally admitted last year that their
response was not great, but Ban Ki-moon, when
he was going out, made a sort of half-apology.
But they have not given any reparations to
Haiti.
And, you know, this has been taken to the
courts here in New York City, but the courts
keep saying the U.N. has immunity.
AMY GOODMAN: I want to go right now to the
former U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.
SECRETARY-GENERAL BAN KI-MOON: [translated]
Let me, at the start, directly address the
Haitian people.
The United Nations deeply regrets the loss
of life and suffering caused by the cholera
outbreak in Haiti.
On behalf of the United Nations, I want to
say very clearly: We apologize to the Haitian
people.
We simply did not do enough with regard to
the cholera outbreak and its spread in Haiti.
We are profoundly sorry for our role.
AMY GOODMAN: "We are profoundly sorry for
our role," said Ban Ki-moon as he was leaving
as U.N. secretary-general.
As we wrap up, the significance of what he
said and what he didn’t say, Kim?
KIM IVES: But stopping short of saying that
it was U.N. troops that brought the cholera
into Haiti.
So, they’ve avoided this because, legally,
they’ll be liable.
But it’s been brought by—the Institute
for Justice and Democracy in Haiti brought
a suit, which has been rebuffed in the U.N.
claim system and also rebuffed in the United
States courts here.
AMY GOODMAN: And before we go, I was asking
Edwidge Danticat before we lost her—I mean,
power is out to half the people of Florida—
KIM IVES: Correct.
AMY GOODMAN: —so it’s very difficult even
to get that phone call.
But the issue of TPS and Haitians both dealing
with this terrible hurricane and having to
leave?
You have 10 seconds.
KIM IVES: As I say, they’re—
AMY GOODMAN: Fifty thousand.
KIM IVES: Yeah, they’re going back.
It’s close to 60,000 who will be sent back.
And again, it’s a triple whammy.
They lose the remittances.
They lose their homes.
And now they’re going to be sent back to
Haiti, which is suffering food insecurity.
AMY GOODMAN: Unless President Trump changes
his mind.
KIM IVES: Unless he changes his mind.
AMY GOODMAN: Kim Ives, I want to thank you
for being with us, editor at Haïti Liberté.
