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Jeanne Marceus, 40, is camped out with hundreds of others under plastic tarps just feet from the Bois de Chene River. On one side, dozens of houses lie flattened from the quake. On the other, a dozen dwellings that slid off the mountain during 2008 rains are piled in a mound. "Every day we look at the sky for clouds," she said. "My house is gone, and now I'm wondering whether I will be swallowed by the river." Hurricanes, tropical storms and floods are a constant threat in Haiti. In 2004, some 3,000 people died in the northern city of Gonaives after Tropical Storm Jeanne. Following the storm, more than $70 million in aid was collected, but little of that was used for flood control. Gonaives flooded again in 2008, killing nearly 800 more. Before the earthquake, aid groups were already trying to mitigate risks to flood-prone areas: Building walls to stabilize hills, installing drainage systems and working with farmers to plant crops with root systems that help hold water. Much of that work was suspended after the quake. The No. 2 official at USAID, Anthony Chan, said the organization's Cash for Work program has employed 6,000 Haitians, many of whom are cleaning irrigation canals in anticipation of the rain. Demolition crews and workers are piling rubble into designated places, but there's still no long-term plan for debris disposal. Another problem is safely removing human waste and garbage. Justine Lesage, an Oxfam relief worker, said the group recently removed 7,000 cubic feet (200 cubic meters) of waste created by 45,000 people at one of the city's camps in just a week. "We're also working very hard to make plans for relocating people, but the Haitian government's plan for this is not clear yet," she said. Many in the camps are already complaining of illnesses. With so many people living outside and using water from buckets, doctors say malaria is on the rise. The coming rains and limited sanitation could also lead to other diseases such as dengue fever, measles and cholera. Haiti's government has talked of trying to relocate earthquake victims to organized camps outside the capital, but so far none has been built. "It took me years to save enough money to build my house here," Marceus said, looking at the ruins of her former home. "Despite all the dangers, I have no plans to leave."
[Associated
Press;
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