Shame
on the UN for creating the deadly cholera epidemic that's killed
7,500 in Haiti
World
View: Nepalese blue-beret troops brought the disease to the stricken
country after the 2010 quake, but report implies the islanders are to
blame
26
April, 2012
Haitians
suffer more than most people in the world from poverty, disease,
dictatorship, occupation and earthquakes. But for the past century,
they have at least been free from cholera.
Not
any more, thanks to the UN. The disease was carried to the island in
2010 by UN troops from Nepal, where cholera is endemic; and it first
appeared near their camps. In the past two years, it has ravaged
Haiti, killing 7,500 people and making 600,000 very ill. People are
still dying in large numbers and it will probably be impossible to
eradicate it from the fresh water supply on the island.
There
is no doubt about the UN's culpability, though it is still trying to
evade this and has not held anybody responsible for what happened. It
is seeking to treat this man-made calamity as if it was a natural
disaster that nobody could have foreseen or prevented. So far it has
largely succeeded, because the outside world pays little attention to
what goes on in Haiti, the poorest country in the Western hemisphere.
The
last time the UN so fatally failed people it was meant to protect was
in Srebrenica in 1995, when 8,373 Muslims were massacred by Serbian
forces in Bosnia. On that occasion, it was a 400-strong Dutch unit of
the UN protection force that failed to stop the massacre of
defenceless people who wrongly supposed they would be all right in a
"Safe Area" declared by the UN Security Council.
Srebrenica
was denounced by the UN secretary general as the worst war crime in
Europe since the Second World War. People still recognise the name,
but how many people know that the UN presence in Haiti has led to a
wholly predictable epidemic that has so far killed 7,568 Haitians, a
toll that is still rising and which, sometime next year, will surpass
that of Srebrenica?
The
UN has yet to respond formally to the charge of starting the epidemic
made against it by human rights organisations, or agree to pay
compensation. It has sought to downplay the whole event,
commissioning an expert report which has just been published and
makes clear that the UN brought cholera to Haiti from Nepal, but
claims "the source of the cholera in Haiti is no longer relevant
to controlling the outbreak".
The
UN study, entitled The Final Report of the Independent Panel of
Experts on the Cholera Outbreak in Haiti, is worth reading as an
example of experts trying to tell a truth deeply damaging to those
who commissioned the report. But at the same time, they rob their
conclusions of impact by wrapping them in bureaucratic gobbledegook
and claiming that nobody in the UN was at fault.
If
anybody is to blame, the independent experts seem to think, it is the
Haitians for being so vulnerable to the incoming bacteria brought by
the infected Nepalese soldiers. Had the Haitians not used the rivers
"for washing, bathing, drinking and recreation", all might
have been well. Haitians lacked natural immunity, had inadequate
sanitation, lacked effective medical facilities and should not have
spread the illness by fleeing their villages when they were hit by
the epidemic. Somehow, so the panel argues, this vulnerability of
Haitians to the cholera means the outbreak "was not the fault
of, or deliberate action of, a group or individual".
This
is hypocrisy of a high order and the epidemic was certainly not an
unhappy accident that nobody in the UN could have predicted.
The
UN troops were sent to Haiti in the wake of the catastrophic
earthquake in January 2010. Nepal was in the middle of a cholera
outbreak, as was widely known. If troops came from Nepal, even after
the most stringent screening, there was the likelihood that they
would bring cholera with them. In practice, screening was very lax
for soldiers on their way from Nepal to Haiti. Worse, in the 10 days
before they departed, they were given 10-day passes to travel around
the country, including the cholera-hit areas. They were not retested
on their return.
The
cholera epidemic in Haiti started downriver from the Nepalese
soldiers' camps at Mirebalais, Hinche and Terre Rouge near a0
tributary of the Artibonite River, north of the capital
Port-au-Prince, the first case being confirmed on 22 October 2010.
Cholera normally spreads through water contaminated by faecal waste
and there was little attempt to dispose of this safely. The
independent report found that raw sewage from the Nepalese camp at
Mirebalais ended up in tanks that were pumped out twice a week by an
independent contractor into a truck. It continues: "The waste is
then transported across the street and up a residential dirt road to
a location at the top of a hill, where it is deposited in an open
septic pit." A photo of the pit in the report shows it to be
just a substantial hole in the ground. It is unfenced and children
play around it. Another open cesspit nearby was used by the Nepalese
soldiers for solid waste, with local residents commenting that "the
area is susceptible to flooding and overflow into the tributary [of
the Artibonite River] during rainfall".
There
had been suggestions advantageous to the UN early on that the
bacteria infecting Haiti might have come from the Gulf of Mexico or
be a home-grown cholera strain previously present in Haiti that had
mutated into a deadlier variety. The report knocks these ideas firmly
on the head. It says that "study indicated that the Haitian
strains were all identical and ... closely related to strains of
Vibrio cholerae from the Indian sub-continent". It is quite
distinct from those isolated in South America, Africa, Bahrain,
Indonesia, Vietnam, Malaysia or Germany.
As
with many official reports, the one on Haiti plays down its most
damning findings in its executive summary and conclusions, but they
are present in more direct language in the body of the report.
This
leaves no doubt about the feckless disregard on the part of the UN
commanders of the health risk posed by bringing Nepalese troops, some
of whom were very likely to be cholera carriers, given that an
epidemic was raging in their country, and allowing them to
contaminate the water supply in Haiti. The excuse by the panel of
experts that all might still have been well if Haiti had a better
supply of fresh water and adequate sanitation is absurdly
self-serving and hypocritical.
The
UN's continuing evasion of responsibility for the Haitian outbreak,
the biggest cholera epidemic anywhere in the world in recent years,
has practical and fatal consequences for Haitians. It means the rest
of the world is unaware of the seriousness of what has happened. The
only way such an epidemic can be stopped is to improve Haiti's fresh
water supply, sanitation, and health care. When the epidemic started,
local medical centres did not even have a place where people could
wash their hands. Haiti, where 400,000 people are still living in
tents because their houses were destroyed by the earthquake two years
ago, does not have any money to build such an infrastructure. When so
many die because of incompetence, that incompetence becomes a crime.
The UN should admit what it did, build this infrastructure, and pay
reparations to its victims.
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