United
Nations stresses for support for Haiti cholera fight
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[June 23, 2017] By
Makini Brice
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (Reuters) - The
United Nations stressed on Thursday its support for eradicating cholera
in Haiti, an epidemic it accidentally started, although the government
said residents would be better served if aid funding was channeled
through it.
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The U.N. secretary-general on Tuesday appointed a new special envoy
for Haiti tasked with leading fundraising efforts for the plan to
beat cholera, introduced in 2010 when peacekeepers dumped infected
sewage into a river.
"We acknowledge that there's a problem and we are here to reiterate
the commitment of the United Nations and the international community
to work together to fight this problem and to work to solve it,"
Bolivia's U.N. Ambassador Sacha Sergio Llorentty Soliz told
journalists at the national palace.
Llorentty is also president of the U.N. Security Council for the
month of June.
Haiti's Minister of Foreign Affairs Aviol Fleuriant said the U.N.
Security Council and the government had discussed plans for better
management of aid in a closed-door meeting.
"A large part of aid travels through NGOs ... which could be used to
efficiently and sustainably finance the implementation of public
policy through governmental channels," he said.
The Security Council voted unanimously in April to end its
13-year-long peacekeeping mission in Haiti and replace it with a
smaller mission, which would be drawn down after two years as the
country boosts its own force.
The peacekeeping mission, one of the longest running in the world
and known as MINUSTAH, has been dogged by controversies, including
the introduction of cholera to the island and sexual abuse claims.
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As members of the Security Council touched down in Haiti on
Thursday, some 200 people assembled outside the U.N. base with
posters and signs calling for reparations to individual cholera
victims and demanding an end to MINUSTAH and the follow-up mission.
"If MINUSTAH hadn't brought cholera here, I wouldn't have had
cholera," said Renette Charedy, a 36-year-old standing at the
fringes of the protest.
The U.N. does not accept legal responsibility for the outbreak of
the disease, which causes uncontrollable diarrhea. Some 9,300 people
have died and more than 800,000 sickened due to cholera and Haiti's
government believes the U.N. still has work to do on it.
(Reporting by Makini Brice; Editing by Anthony Esposito and Richard
Pullin)
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