• Article
  • Print
  • Send to a friend
  • Comment (0)
  •  

Straight Talk

Canada halts humanitarian aid to Haiti

Fantino scolds them for their garbage

Published on January 11, 2013


Haitians went through hell on earth

The Harper government has frozen humanitarian aid to Haiti.

The reason behind it is downright shameful.

It came after a visit to Haiti by Julian Fantino, Canada's foreign aid minister, a former Toronto cop who keeps putting his foot into it time after time.

Fantino was walking around Port-au-Prince and found garbage and litter everywhere on the streets.

There's a reason. The city was almost wiped off the map by the Great Earthquake of 2010 that killed 300,000 inhabitants. The city was devastated. There are still 350,000 living in tents and makeshift shelters, begging for food and hoping for desperate supplies.

It's not as if Canada hasn't given money. The Harper government generously sent down $ 353 million and individual Canadians donated another $ 200 million to stricken Haitians.

With few schools or hospitals rebuilt, picking up garbage and cleaning the streets is not their first concern. It's understandable.

But for Fantino who is used to tidy suburban streets in his Toronto-Vaughan riding, the whole sticking mess was disgusting.

It was at this point that Fantino decided to freeze humanitarian aid until the Haitians pick up their garbage in the streets.

 

Instead of getting the money they need  for reconstruction, Haitians get a lecture from a former Toronoto cop  who scolds them for their dirty streets.

Stephen Harper should have fired him on the spot. Instead Harper decides to do nothing.

Fantino is still a minister. And the garbage is still in the streets in Haiti.

That's where it will stay, Haitians say, and that's where it will remain until the homes, schools and hospitals are rebuilt. That's their priority.

The United States government appealed to Fantino to reverse his decision and continue Canadian government humanitarian aid to Haiti.

Fantino refused. He said he has no intention of changing his mind. Canada is "not a charity," he said.

There's a reason for the hard line. Harper and Fantino want to link foreign aid to foreign trade -- how to make money for Canada out of the misery in Haiti.

Fantino said Canadians expect their government to seek opportunities in Haiti where everyone will come out "a clear winner."

Right now there isn't any foreign trade in Haiti, or much of anything else for that matter.

Canada is being cursed in Haiti this week as another wealthy country pretending to give money to the Third World while keeping it for itself.

 

 

Submit a comment

Submit a comment (we keep all emails private)
Agreement

We ask that users remain courteous. You may not post insulting, discriminatory or inappropriate content, which may be removed at our discretion. We are not responsible for user content and opinions. Use of this site as well as content submission & ownership are governed by our Conditions of Use and Privacy Policy.

Member organizations should be non-profit in nature, and promote legal activities. Any organization found promoting illegal activities or commercial products or services will be deleted from the site.

I agree with these conditions.

Notice
The management of this site indicates that it is not liable for persons, organizations and / or organizations to register in order to promote and make themselves known. Moreover, the managers of this site should not be held responsible for errors or other errors that slip inside information recorded under this heading.

Advertising

Advertising