Refleksi :  Bagaimana dengan team NKRI dan berita hasil kerja mereka di Haiti? 

http://www.granma.cu/ingles/2010/enero/vier29/Cuba-was-the-first-country.html

       Havana.  January 29, 2010
     

     
      Cuba was the first country to help us
      . Affirms Jean Rénald Clérismé, advisor to Haitian President René 
Preval's office 

      Leticia Martínez Hernández / PHOTO: Juvenal Balán , enviados especiales

      PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti. - The international community's response in 
helping Haiti has been very important, above all that of Cuba, which was "the 
first country to help us, because the Cubans were working here before the 
earthquake, and have collaborated a lot in saving a considerable number of 
lives," affirmed Jean Rénald Clérismé, advisor to the office of President René 
Préval, during a meeting with Cuban reporters. 

      Rénald also acknowledged the immediate support of the Dominican Republic, 
whose president, Leonel Fernández, arrived in Port-au-Prince the day after the 
earthquake. Likewise, he praised the help of the Bolivarian Republic of 
Venezuela. "We can say that the Hispanic world of the region is very much 
present in Haiti." 

      Rénald particularly thanked Fidel, who initiated the cooperation program 
with Préval; Raúl, and "that other great friend, Cuban Vice President Esteban 
Lazo, who has accompanied Haiti for so many years." 

      Regarding the number of dead as a result of the earthquake that 
devastated Port-au-Prince, he said that the total given stands at 150,000, 
although that figure could rise to 200,000, because many people remain under 
the wreckage. "This has been worse than a war," he commented. 

      However, to date the country is receiving help from all over the world. 
"We would like to achieve good coordination to help the Haitian people, and for 
there not to be a politicization of the disaster; that each country will 
contribute to the health and dignity of the people," he commented. 

      Rénald admitted that there have been coordination problems in food 
distribution. He said that on the government level, working teams have been 
created, but in a disaster situation, coordination becomes very difficult, 
above all "because we do not have the habit of doing so. It is complicated, but 
day by day, we are trying to achieve that coordination so that people receive 
the aid," he said. 

      Regarding the controversial issue of the adoption of Haitian children who 
lost their parents in the earthquake, he said that the country has a Ministry 
of Social Affairs and an Institute of Social Welfare that oversee those 
procedures. "The government has no problem with adoption, but it should be done 
according to the country's regulations." 

      He also explained that a plan exits for building encampments outside the 
city and creating places for some 600,000 people who lost their homes. 

      Translated by Granma International 

     

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