The Humanitarian Situation in Haiti
A Statement Delivered by Dr. Christophe Fournier, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), to the United Nations Security Council "Arria Formula" Meeting
April 8, 2005 Members of the Security
Council,
Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is grateful
for this opportunity to address our concerns to you about the current crisis
faced by people in Haiti, in particular in Port au Prince.
Civilians in the capital have been caught in the crossfire
of extreme violence that has wracked the city in waves since September 2004.
From visits to the city morgue, MSF estimated that 100 people were killed each
month from September to December 2004 as armed factions supporting and opposing
exiled President Jean-Bertrand Aristide fought in the streets of the seaside
slums, or "quartiers populaires",
of Cite Soleil and Bel Air.
MSF has been present in Haiti since 1991, mainly providing
assistance in the country's provinces or in response to natural disasters. In December 2004,
MSF opened a 42-bed trauma center at St. Joseph's Hospital in order to
provide free emergency medical and surgical services to the growing number of
people injured by violent acts who had little or no access to care. MSF also
offers post-surgical physiotherapy at a nearby rehabilitation center. Today,
both facilities are filled to capacity.
From December 19, 2004 until April 3, 2005, our teams
treated 1,293 patients – 391,
or more than 30%, suffered injuries from violent attacks, including 303 people
treated for gunshot wounds, 34 for machete or knife wounds, and 22 for rape.
Of those we have treated for violent injuries, 190, or nearly half, were women,
children, and elderly, a point that highlights the fact that civilians are bearing
the brunt of the sporadic, ongoing violence in Port au Prince. Every month, the
number of such patients has increased, and we have begun to see injuries caused
by exploding bullets – injuries that, as one doctor told me when I was
in Haiti, are unusual for a city setting but common in war zones.
Before our program began, intense fighting seemed to be confined to Cite Soleil
and Bel Air. Today, though, the violence is apparently spreading to many other
neighborhoods throughout the city. While most of our patients continue to arrive
from Cite Soleil and Bel Air, we receive patients every day from neighborhoods
like Centre Ville, St. Martin, La Saline, Poste Marchand, Delmas 33, Carrefour,
and Carrefour Feuille.
From what our patients tell our doctors and nurses,
people have been shot and killed, both deliberately and unintentionally, by all
of the armed groups active in Haiti today. Our patients say they have been targeted
directly by factions in the "quartiers populaires" for their perceived allegiance to one
group or another, sometimes killed in areas controlled by rival factions for
being considered "traitors." Women and children have come to our
trauma center after being shot during unpredictable flare-ups of indiscriminate
shooting near their homes, or while buying or selling goods at public markets,
or simply while walking down the wrong street at the wrong time. We have also
received a number of patients who said they were wounded by the Haitian National
Police (HNP) during police actions in many parts of the city, including several
people from Bel Air who told us they were wounded when the HNP opened fire on
demonstrators there in March. A few patients have also said they were wounded
during Minustah operations.
Conditions of life in several of the capital's
poorest neighborhoods are terrible and rapidly getting worse. Already impoverished
before this latest crisis, these neighborhoods are falling into near-total ruin.
Economic activity in some areas has ground to a halt in an atmosphere where extortion,
robbery, murder, and rape are common. Shops have been burnt to the ground, and
shopkeepers who refuse to pay extortion fees have been executed. At a moment
when most people are struggling to find even the most meager resources to survive
from one day to the next, they fear venturing out into a lawless environment,
virtually held hostage in their homes.
Outside the capital, general impoverishment leads to the lack of access to
even the most basic health care services, as well. MSF has provided primary and
maternal health care in Petite Riviere, Artibonite Department, since 2000. A
recent survey conducted by MSF found that the cost-recovery, or user fee, system
causes half of the already indigent population to sell off tools and other equipment
just to pay for minimal health care. With the majority of people in the area
struggling to survive on less than 50 cents a day, it is not surprising that
one in ten people said they cannot access health services because of the cost.
Violence in Haiti's capital, though, remains MSF's main concern,
as it continues to wreak havoc on civilians and destroy hundreds of lives. Women
and young girls, in particular, are being victimized by heinous sexual violence.
Our medical teams have treated 22 of victims of extremely violent sexual attacks,
some committed against girls as young as 10 years of age. Many victims have been
severely injured or forced to witness the murder of a parent before being kidnapped
and brutally gang raped. These women and young girls often suffer further humiliation
after their ordeal because they are afraid that if people find out they went
for help, they will be killed. Based on our patients' testimony and other
sources, rape seems to be used by some groups as a strategy to instill fear in
civilians, and the true scale of sexual violence is certainly much greater than
the number of victims MSF has treated.
Families in areas of the capital most affected by violence
are fleeing to other parts of the city. Civilians without any resources, though,
are forced to remain, often at the risk of deprivation and severe harm. Patients
come to MSF from all over Port au Prince, with a majority brought to the trauma
center by the Red Cross and Minustah. But we know for sure that many victims
in places like Cite Soleil have no access to MSF's trauma center or any other health
facility. They are forced to hide for days without any treatment for their wounds.
Those with serious injuries have little chance of surviving. Sometimes the wounded
can't afford to pay for transportation, or no transportation exists in
a neighborhood following an eruption of gunfire. If the wounded manage to get
to a public hospital, they may find a structure that lacks medical staff and
supplies. Nearly none of the wounded can afford the high price charged for private
care, while some civilians say they fear arbitrary arrest if they seek treatment
for violent injuries.
Steps must be taken to ensure that the violently wounded
can access lifesaving medical care. This access must not be conditioned on any
considerations, political or otherwise, except need. MSF's trauma center
is located near but not within the areas of most intense fighting, which allows
people from all over the city to access its services. To date, our presence and
humanitarian work has been respected by all armed groups. MSF, though, has not
set up any facilities in areas of Cite Soleil secured by Minustah in order to
avoid acts of retaliation against our patients or team by those factions who
may feel under attack by Minustah forces.
Fighting erupts in many of the city's neighborhoods nearly every night,
with people there confined to their homes in a state of constant fear. Many of
those who have lived and worked in Port au Prince for decades told me when I
was in Haiti that they have never experienced such levels of violence and insecurity.
They said that the anxiety they feel today is far and above worse than at any
time during the country's many recent political crises. The needs and safety
of civilians most affected by this brutal reality must be at the center of any
response to the present emergency. At the very least, the ability for those wounded
in the violence to access life saving medical and surgical care must be assured.
Thank you. |