Haiti
WEDNESDAY, FEB 3, 2010 10:04 EST
A new capital city for Haiti
The government, and population, can't stay in a place as geologically unstable as Port-au-Prince, says seismologist
BY CLEMENS HÖGES
He had predicted an earthquake with a magnitude of about 7.2 points on the Richter scale, and the actual quake measured 7.0. For years, he had taken precise measurements and performed careful calculations, and he had done his job exceedingly well.
The Haitian capital may be tomorrow's deathtrap, but it is currently today's nightmare. The bodies still lying in the wreckage are decomposing in the heat, while the survivors simply step over them. Looters are clearing out the ruined buildings, hunted by police officers on motorcycles wielding pump guns. The hungry survivors fight over every bag of rice tossed down from the trucks of international aid organizations.
The United Nations estimates that 75 percent of the city will have to be rebuilt, and that well over 500,000 people are now living in the streets. The more fortunate of the newly homeless have plastic tarps, mattresses or wooden boards to build tents for themselves. The drone of American Blackhawk helicopters can be heard overhead.
The Haitians have been promised $2 billion, both for the immediate disaster relief effort and to pay for the reconstruction of the country and its capital. Now the question is how to go about it. There are two possible approaches, one dangerous and the other audacious.
"We cannot invest a cent in Port-au-Prince; it would be a waste of money," says Bernard Etheart. "We can't afford to lose everything once again. We must take advantage of the opportunity we have today." Sitting in a radio studio, Etheart takes off his headphones and runs his hand through his tousled white hair. He laughs a lot and, at 72, moves like a much younger man.
Etheart studied in Munich, where he met a young female journalist, also from Haiti. The two returned home to Haiti, but before long then-Haitian dictator Jean-Claude Duvalier, known as Baby Doc, expelled them from the country, as part of an effort to do away with his critics. After 18 years in exile, they finally returned home.
Etheart was a professor for many years, and he now runs the government's institute for land reform. Agriculture is about the only industry that functions in Haiti, which produces sugarcane and coffee and not much else.
Haitians have little choice but to listen to Etheart, whose wife owns one of the most influential radio stations on the island, which, of course, gives Etheart a forum for his views. About 50 percent of Haitians are illiterate, and many are too poor to afford a television set. But the one thing they can do is vote, which is why radio is such a powerful medium in the country. The Ethearts also publish a newspaper.
Breaking through the vicious circle
Etheart believes that the earthquake must now force Haiti to finally stand on its own feet. Of the country's population of 9 million, about 2 million live in the crowded Port-au-Prince valley, at a population density of 5,000 people per square kilometer. The capital is a population magnet, and yet it is incapable of feeding so many people. The conditions contribute to the growth of slums, like the ones that have crept up the hills surrounding Port-au-Prince. When the earthquake struck, the poorly constructed houses on these hillsides quickly slid downhill, burying the inhabitants in the process.
Etheart has a plan that could solve the country's problems. He opens a file and pulls out a piece of paper, a graph taken from a study conducted by a colleague. It illustrates Haiti's vicious circle: The government invests its money in the capital, but this only aggravates the country's poverty. As the capital becomes more attractive for migrants from the countryside, the state is forced to spend more money, becoming even poorer in the process.
"It is now time to break through this vicious circle," says Etheart. "We must invest in the country's small cities." But it would be unacceptable to forcibly displace people, he adds. "We have to offer them incentives" -- jobs, schools, hospitals, anything with a future.
Of course, the earthquake could also help Etheart press forward with his dream of major land reforms. The government is already sending thousands of people to rural areas. Initially buses and trucks left the chaos of the capital on a daily basis, transporting passengers to the countryside at no cost. The only catch was that no one was given return tickets. But now very few city residents are taking the government up on its not-too-subtle resettlement offer.
Staying in the capital
This is not surprising, since the refugees have little to look forward to in the countryside: no jobs, no place to live and not much to eat. "What am I supposed to do in the countryside?" asks Cynthia Saint Fort. The 22-year-old nurse wants to go to medical school, and the country's only university is in Port-au-Prince. Of course, she adds, she is also afraid to stay there, in a place where she has seen so many people die. She says that she is only alive today because someone else died. When the houses began breaking apart, she started running and tripped, and a man fell on top of her. As he was lying there, a piece of concrete fell on the man and killed him.
For Saint Fort, Port-au-Prince is still the only place where she feels useful. The hillside house she and her brothers lived in before the quake was destroyed, but the family has now built a makeshift shelter in the ruins with mattresses, furniture and tarps.
They plan to rebuild the house, and they hope to receive government assistance to do so, but like everyone else, they have no idea what the future will hold. She spends her days tending to her patients in a makeshift hospital set up in the courtyard of a house. Death was yesterday. Now her life is in Port-au-Prince.
Etheart is familiar with all of the reasons why Haitians are unwilling to leave the capital. But he also believes that if all the money that is now being pledged to Haiti is invested in smaller cities, life outside Port-au-Prince could also become more appealing.
"We need advice"
A small research facility, the only building left of the country's Ministry of Public Works, lies on the outskirts of downtown Port-au-Prince. Jacques Gabriel, Haiti's minister of public works, transportation and communication, walks with a stoop as he enters his new office. It is empty, with the exception of a desk, five moving boxes, and a framed map of Haiti leaning against the wall. His ministry literally disappeared beneath his feet.
When the earthquake struck three weeks ago, Gabriel tried to make it to the door, but it was jammed. A hole opened up in the wall, and when the ground shook he was thrown to the floor. Another tremor flung him outside, bruised but alive. He doesn't see very well now, after losing his glasses in the quake. He hasn't been able to find his optometrist.
Gabriel moved to the research facility, where he was given an office, and he is thankful that his old Nokia mobile phone still works. The building now serves as the ministry's control center.
Other ministries are in similar shape. The president and his cabinet are working in makeshift offices in a police barracks near the airport. They have little more than mobile phones, which explains why there is so little evidence of any government presence in Haiti, and why United Nations peacekeepers and US soldiers are running the city.
At some point, the government and the parliament will have to decide whether to stay in Port-au-Prince. "We must consider the pros and cons," says the minister. If the capital was in the interior of the country, he argues, "we would lose our direct contact with the port."
Is it even possible to simply abandon a capital? Wouldn't it be preferable to rebuild, using lighter materials and safer construction methods?
Dessalines, who later proclaimed himself emperor of Haiti, using Napoleon as his role model, was murdered in 1806. Today, his statue stands in front of the ruins of the presidential palace in Port-au-Prince, which his successor turned into the capital.
What a great article! And i totally agree about using all the money in different parts of the country. Even thing will even out and it will be a better and safer place to be.
And please tell me where we are gonna get the money to build a brand new Capitol city in Dessalines?? HAITI can't afford to build a new Capitol period!!!!!!! You all have to be logical. So if a earthquake happens in San Francisco tomorrow morning are you all gonna to saying that we have to move it some place else. Rebuild PAP in the same area with earthquake resistant material, make it smaller, add a second runway to the airport. Pass laws that forbid building of houses along hillsides, invest in clean energy, decentralize the area, make a concerted effort in in bringing jobs to the countryside.... PAP is here to stay people. I understand your concern for having a Capitol near a fault zone but nothing is guaranteed that a earthquakewont occur in the central or northern part of the country...As a matter of fact, an earthquake happened there before. No matter where we move it we will be at risk.
I say abandon ship while we can and move to Africa...didn't Senegal offer land to us? We can make our state there...and eventually pull a Kosovo and make our own country smack in the middle of Senegal...lol. What do you say Ayido? I'm sure you're onboard with it!!! Then you'll only be a short drive away to visit us instead of taking that long flight to the Caribbean.
I say abandon ship while we can and move to Africa...didn't Senegal offer land to us? We can make our state there...and eventually pull a Kosovo and make our own country smack in the middle of Senegal...lol. What do you say Ayido? I'm sure you're onboard with it!!! Then you'll only be a short drive away to visit us instead of taking that long flight to the Caribbean.
Rebuild PAP as a major city, but under no circumstances should it be the capital. A major fault is under the place people! Hinch, Desaline, and Gonaives should be explore by experts. Just cause the capital is moved doesn't mean PAP won't flourish, i.e Lagos, Nigeria.
Rebuild PAP as a major city, but under no circumstances should it be the capital. A major fault is under the place people! Hinch, Desaline, and Gonaives should be explore by experts. Just cause the capital is moved doesn't mean PAP won't flourish, i.e Lagos, Nigeria.
I do believe Hinche would be a nice place to build the capital. It is still in the central plateau and not too far from the old capital. No matter what I do want Haiti to be decentralized to a capital. There should be multiple locations with government bureaus as stated at one of the threads.
I say abandon ship while we can and move to Africa...didn't Senegal offer land to us? We can make our state there...and eventually pull a Kosovo and make our own country smack in the middle of Senegal...lol. What do you say Ayido? I'm sure you're onboard with it!!! Then you'll only be a short drive away to visit us instead of taking that long flight to the Caribbean.
Abie made me look up Senegal's offer of repatriation.... 90 some percent muslim.... I'm not going!
I say abandon ship while we can and move to Africa...didn't Senegal offer land to us? We can make our state there...and eventually pull a Kosovo and make our own country smack in the middle of Senegal...lol. What do you say Ayido? I'm sure you're onboard with it!!! Then you'll only be a short drive away to visit us instead of taking that long flight to the Caribbean.
Abie made me look up Senegal's offer of repatriation.... 90 some percent muslim.... I'm not going!
lol...I'm with you on that. I'd prefer to stick to what we have now...then to go live as a second class citizen in the land where Islam is the prevailing faith and men can have dozens and dozens of wives. Not that there is anything wrong with Islam nor polygamy (well some may argue this point)...its just not my cup of tea. And to add to the fact that in terms of regional standards we'd be even worse off seeing as our neighbors would be in either similar or worse conditions than us. The fact that they may look like most of us isn't an incentive for me when looking long-term.