Hurricane Matthew has devastated Haiti, but women are at the forefront of the recovery.
The devastation in Haiti following Hurricane Matthew is extreme. According to the most recent estimates, the hurricane leftmore thanand 2.1 million affected. Around 90% of some areas of southern Haiti are reportedly destroyed, and the lack of clean drinking water has brought with it a deadly cholera outbreak. While international aid, including food, clean water and supplies, is arriving, the lack of coordination to distribute it effectively and efficiently.
Although international media has largely shifted its focus, local, grassroots, women-led groups are actively surveying the situation,, and standing ready to lead recovery and relief.
There is so much damage and destructionhouses, plantations, livestock. Everything has disappeared and many people died, explain Mikelita Jean and Malia Jean, coordinators of Global Fund for Women grantee partner, the Association of Haitian Women Living With and Affected by HIV (AFHIAVIH), which was founded in 2007 to empower and meet the unique needs of women and children affected by HIV in Haiti. People are in the street because even the shelters have been destroyed. Women and girls are the most vulnerable.
Addressing Immediate Needs in Haiti
Women on the ground in Haiti emphasize the urgent need for shelter for women and children. They say that children are in the streets naked and exposed to the extreme sun, and women are getting vaginal and bladder infections due to a lack of sanitary conditions, clean water or clean underwear and clothing.
Evelyne Denis, a nurse who works with the Support Group for Development of the South (GADES), spoke with to this author from Les Cayes, one of the towns in southern Haiti hardest hit by Hurricane Matthew. In addition to shelter, the biggest need right now, she says, is food and clean drinking water. Denis and others are trying to treat the wounded as best they can, with limited medical supplies.
The looming spread of cholera is bringing renewed fear that the situation could worsen. We face another potentially catastrophic threat, cholera, as the drinking water supply is not clean, says Elvira Eugene from Global Fund for Women grantee partner, the Sun Womens Association of Haiti (AFASDA), which has been building a powerful grassroots movement to advance womens human rights in Haiti since 1997.
Importance of Grassroots Womens Groups
Despite the severe destruction from Hurricane Matthew, women in Haiti are ready to lead recovery. Global Fund for Womens grantee partners are already acting to fill gaps in immediate relief.
These local, women-led groups with deep roots in their communities arein a unique position to address the unique needs of women and children. After the 2010 earthquake in Haiti, much international aid was misused. But the money that went directly into the hands of local, grassroots womens groups helped them not only fill gaps in immediate relief, but also rebuild their communities and empower women in the years that followed.
and can be at increased risk of violence in the aftermath of disasters. Relief workers often overlook womens health-care needslike access to sanitary napkins and contraception, and maternal, newborn and postnatal care.
In Haiti, as after the 2010 earthquake, disaster can pose a severe risk to women in terms of increased sexual violence and. But local womens groups are able not only to provide women with information on accessing services and shelter, but to educate and empower them about their human rights.
Global Fund for Womens experienceincluding over 20 years of grantmaking in Haitihas shown how critical it is that women play leading roles in immediate crisis relief and response, as well as in long-term recovery and rebuilding. Investing directly in local womens groups in Haiti is absolutely critical following Hurricane Matthew.
Women as Leading Actors
Global Fund for Womens grantee partners are already on the frontlines of immediate relief and recovery, with an eye toward the acute needs of women and children.
We have collected a list of cases to help KOFAVIV members find their families in extremely difficult circumstances, explains Josie Philistin from KOFAVIV, the Commission of Women Victims for Victims, which a group of rape survivors formed in 2004 to meet the needs of thousands of women and children who have survived sexual violence and slavery. Through our call center, a free national hotline, we receive calls requesting aid for prevention and control against cholera and violence, as well as for assistance with hygiene kits and basic supplies.
These women activists are developing plans of action to ensure that funding is used most effectively to get services and assistance to those who need it most. For instance, Nadine Louis, executive director of Foundation TOYA, which operates a girls club in Les Cayes, shared that they are focusing on girls needs, ensuring their safety and helping them to get back to school, as most schools have been damaged and remain closed.
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Girls, after any disaster, are usually the last to receive the help or attention they need. All too often, they become victims, expresses Louis. Funding will help us ensure that girls have access to [Foundation TOYAs] girls center in Les Cayes, have school supplies and have safe spaces to go as rehabilitation efforts begin.
Filling the Gap
It is critical to fill the gap in funding to ensure that money and attention goes directly to these grassroots womens groupsand that they are trusted to use the money as only they know best. Haiti is theand largely dependent on international aid, which often does not reach the grassroots or womens groups.
Womens groups desperately need funding, explains Global Fund for Womens advisor, Tania Pierre-Charles, in Port-au-Prince. She adds that money will make a world of difference for grassroots organizations to be able to recover their work space and resume the provision of their vital services to women and girls at this critical time.
Courageous women in Haiti are ready to lead short-term relief, and theyll be there rebuilding long after international aid efforts have left. Its time for the international community to spotlight the courage and resilience of women in Haiti, andnow more than ever.
*[A version of this article was originally published by .]
The views expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect 51勛圖s editorial policy.
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