Christmas misery for Haitians
MARITZA Monfort is singing along to a Christmas carol in Creole on the radio, but the Haitian mother of two is struggling to lift her spirits.
"I sing to ease my pain. If I think too much, I'll die," said Monfort, 38, one of more than a million Haitians made homeless by a January earthquake that plunged the poor Caribbean nation into the most calamitous year of its history.
With a raging cholera epidemic and election turmoil heaping more death and hardship on top of the quake devastation, Haitians are facing an exceptionally bleak New Year marked by the prospect of more suffering and uncertainty.
The January 12 earthquake killed more than a quarter of a million people and snuffed out what had been some encouraging signs of revival in one of the Western Hemisphere's poorest economies.
Following hard on the quake's heels, the cholera epidemic has killed more than 2,500 Haitians since mid-October and is still claiming victims daily, confronting the United Nations-led international community with one of its toughest ever humanitarian assistance tasks.
"Yesterday my mother almost died because she got cholera. I had to run with her to the hospital. This Christmas is a Christmas of misery," Monfort told Reuters as she cleaned with soap and water the inside of the plastic tent where she lives with her children in the Place Saint Pierre quake survivors' camp in Port-au-Prince's hillside Petionville district.
Ranked one of the world's poorest states, Haiti has never come close to emulating the glittering Christmas displays and festive consumer offers to be found in richer neighbors, such as the United States, less than two hours' flying time away.
But many Haitians still celebrated the feast of "Tonton Noel" - Father Christmas in Creole - with gifts if they could afford them and, for the very lucky, better-off minority, a meal that could include meat, rice and Congo beans.
But only a handful of shops this year - among those left standing after the earthquake that reduced to rubble many commercial and residential zones of the sprawling, chaotic capital - display any kind of Christmas decorations.
And there are no lights, tinsel or festive messages in sight in the squalid crowded tent and tarpaulin camps housing tens of thousands of earthquake survivors that carpet most of the available open spaces in rubble-strewn Port-au-Prince.
"We cannot decorate dirty tents where we are living in misery ? we're not in the mood to celebrate Christmas," said Juliette Marsan, 35, another occupant of the Place Saint Pierre camp.
"My concern is to feed my children and I can't even do that," she added.
Outgoing President Rene Preval is calling this holiday season "the most difficult that Haiti has ever lived."
"My heart does not let me say 'Merry Christmas' because of all the pain of the earthquake victims in the camps, and the suffering of those sick with cholera," he told journalists this week.
"I sing to ease my pain. If I think too much, I'll die," said Monfort, 38, one of more than a million Haitians made homeless by a January earthquake that plunged the poor Caribbean nation into the most calamitous year of its history.
With a raging cholera epidemic and election turmoil heaping more death and hardship on top of the quake devastation, Haitians are facing an exceptionally bleak New Year marked by the prospect of more suffering and uncertainty.
The January 12 earthquake killed more than a quarter of a million people and snuffed out what had been some encouraging signs of revival in one of the Western Hemisphere's poorest economies.
Following hard on the quake's heels, the cholera epidemic has killed more than 2,500 Haitians since mid-October and is still claiming victims daily, confronting the United Nations-led international community with one of its toughest ever humanitarian assistance tasks.
"Yesterday my mother almost died because she got cholera. I had to run with her to the hospital. This Christmas is a Christmas of misery," Monfort told Reuters as she cleaned with soap and water the inside of the plastic tent where she lives with her children in the Place Saint Pierre quake survivors' camp in Port-au-Prince's hillside Petionville district.
Ranked one of the world's poorest states, Haiti has never come close to emulating the glittering Christmas displays and festive consumer offers to be found in richer neighbors, such as the United States, less than two hours' flying time away.
But many Haitians still celebrated the feast of "Tonton Noel" - Father Christmas in Creole - with gifts if they could afford them and, for the very lucky, better-off minority, a meal that could include meat, rice and Congo beans.
But only a handful of shops this year - among those left standing after the earthquake that reduced to rubble many commercial and residential zones of the sprawling, chaotic capital - display any kind of Christmas decorations.
And there are no lights, tinsel or festive messages in sight in the squalid crowded tent and tarpaulin camps housing tens of thousands of earthquake survivors that carpet most of the available open spaces in rubble-strewn Port-au-Prince.
"We cannot decorate dirty tents where we are living in misery ? we're not in the mood to celebrate Christmas," said Juliette Marsan, 35, another occupant of the Place Saint Pierre camp.
"My concern is to feed my children and I can't even do that," she added.
Outgoing President Rene Preval is calling this holiday season "the most difficult that Haiti has ever lived."
"My heart does not let me say 'Merry Christmas' because of all the pain of the earthquake victims in the camps, and the suffering of those sick with cholera," he told journalists this week.
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