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A view from Haiti

By Katrina Crew
February 7, 2010 at 2:35 pm

On Friday, my colleague Sarah wrote about the importance of toilets after a disaster like the Haiti earthquake. David Peppiatt, our international director, is in Haiti now and has sent back a vivid description of why they’re so needed.

Some early reflections at the end of my first day, which was spent mostly at base camp meeting with Red Cross and Red Crescent delegates and then a visit to La Piste camp, where our  mass sanitation emergency response unit is working.

I cannot emphasise enough the enormous scale of this operation. There are 500 Red Cross delegates on the ground with more on their way.  There’s a constant flow of people through base camp coming from Red Cross and Red Crescent National Societies around the world..  Base camp infrastructure and coordination are huge tasks alone – can you imagine having to provide tents, food, water and toilets for a few hundred aid workers on the edge of a city of rubble?

Steaming rubbish in Haiti camp

Conditions in the camps earthquake survivors are living in are shocking.  Overcrowded.  Filthy.  People sleeping under scraps of plastic, old sheets draped over some precarious frame of wood,  pieces of timber or whatever they have recovered from the rubble.  What struck me most was the human waste scattered throughout the camp.  The stench in places was repulsive.

Our mass sanitation team is working around the clock to dig latrines in the camp. It’s encouraging to see some already up and in use. They’re working to get 100 up by the end of next week.  The public health team went in today to deliver hygiene promotion messages – translated into Creole and posters put up on toilets about washing hands.  They’ve sent out thousands of SMS messages with public health advice and also launched a public health campaign on the radio.

La Piste

Shelter is proving very problematic. People are extremely vulnerable in these makeshift shelters for long – little protection, unsafe and no dignity. The looming rainy season followed by hurricanes make this a matter of urgency and huge responsibility for the Red Cross as we lead the shelter response in Haiti.

As for the earthquake damage and destruction, words fail to describe what you see. It is like those desperate images of a bombed city where huge swathes have been decimated, destroyed and turned into mountains of rubble and debris.  It will surely take many months, if not years in some places, to clear the damage and debris before the rebuilding can begin.

Follow updates from the mass sanitation team on the British Red Cross international blog.


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