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HAITI
Scraping by on Mud Cookies
By Wadner Pierre
PORT-AU-PRINCE - At six in the morning in Cite Soleil, the poorest zone of Haiti's capital city, the sun is already up. It's the start of another workday for Lurene Jeanti, making cookies from mud, butter and salt. She's been mixing the ingredients on the side of the road to sell to her neighbours for the past eight years.
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Haitians in DR Reap Far Less than They Sow
By Jon Anderson
BONAO, Monseñor Province, Dominican Republic - Luis Miguel, a soft-spoken and serious 21-year-old from Haiti's Artibonnite Valley, stands on a ridge overlooking the small farm in the Dominican Cibao where he works as the owner's overseer. He adopted his Dominican moniker in order to fit in.
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HAITI
Gonaives Girds for Heavy Storm Season
By Wadner Pierre
GONAIVES - Gonaives, the third largest city in Haiti, is rushing to prepare for an expected highly active hurricane season. The city was flooded by three hurricanes in the past six years - Hannah and Ike in 2008, and Jeanne, which killed at least 2,500 people in 2004.
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Haitian Immigrant Street Peddlers Try to Get a Leg Up
By Jon Anderson
SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic - Gaston Dorelus has little education, no vocational training, no extrinsic qualifications to make his way through life any easier.
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Haiti Gears Up for Polls - Again, Sans Lavalas
By Wadner Pierre
PORT-AU-PRINCE - After weeks of delays, Haitian President René Préval confirmed this month that presidential and legislative elections will take place on Nov. 28. The U.N. and Western donor nations are pledging millions of dollars in support of the polls, but with at least 1.5 million people still homeless from the January earthquake, questions loom over how to ensure voter participation.
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Q&A
"NGOs Are Here to Stay"
Aprille Muscara interviews SAM WORTHINGTON, president and CEO of InterAction
UNITED NATIONS - InterAction is the largest alliance of U.S.-based NGOs, with over 190 members. Its head, Sam Worthington, spoke recently with IPS about the role of NGOs in Haiti, the U.S. and throughout the world.
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HAITI
Patchwork of Aid Groups Coming into Focus
By Aprille Muscara
UNITED NATIONS - Half a year ago, non-governmental organisations (NGOs) from around the globe flocked to Haiti to help pick up the pieces after a 7.0 magnitude earthquake shattered the fragile Caribbean nation. Many have since left, but hundreds remain, as does the logistical challenge of their coordination.
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Haiti's Tent Camps Likely to Remain for Years
By Beatrice Paez
UNITED NATIONS - Six months after Haiti's devastating earthquake, U.N. aid agencies say they are entering the challenging phase of replacing the tents that are home to the estimated 1.5 million people who remain displaced.
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HAITI
Six Months On, Shelter Still a Main Priority
By Matthew O. Berger
WASHINGTON - Six months ago Monday, an earthquake rocked the western hemisphere's poorest country, driving it deeper into poverty and burying it under its nascent infrastructure.
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Flooded with NGOs, Haiti Looks to Fall Presidential Polls
By Peter Richards
MONTEGO BAY, Jamaica - They descended in droves after the Jan. 12 earthquake devastated the French-speaking Caribbean Community (Caricom) country, killing an estimated 300,000 people and leaving more than one million homeless.
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Caribbean Summit Seeks United Front to Economic Crisis
By Peter Richards
MONTEGO BAY, Jamaica - Caribbean Community (Caricom) leaders are gathering here next week for their annual summit still struggling to recover from the two-year global economic and financial crisis that has taken a major toll on their individual economies.
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Fragile States Becoming More Fragile
By Jim Lobe*
WASHINGTON - Some of the world's weakest states are becoming ever more fragile, according to the 2010 edition of the annual "Failed States Index" (FSI) released here Monday by Foreign Policy magazine and the independent Fund for Peace (FFP).
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Haitian Farmers Leery of Monsanto's Largesse
By Peter Costantini*
PÉTIONVILLE - Haitian farmers are worried that giant transnational corporations like Monsanto are attempting to gain a larger foothold in the local economy under the guise of earthquake relief and rebuilding.
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As "Temporary" Camps Linger, Tensions Rise with Haitian Landowners
By Ansel Herz*
PORT-AU-PRINCE - Thousands of victims of the January earthquake in Haiti are at risk of being displaced for a second time as private landowners throughout the nation's capital city grow impatient with makeshift tent camps on their properties.
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Q&A
"Agrarian Reform Is Indispensible for Haiti"
Peter Costantini interviews VOLNY PAULTRE, chief agronomist for the FAO
CYVADIER, Haiti - In the wake of unimaginable death and destruction, Haitian farmers continue to work hard to wring food for their country out of a depleted land. But now they have company.
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A jolt from earth just 15 kilometres from the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince has left a "minimum" of 100,000 dead.  IPS analyses the  consequences of the devastation, and the struggle to pick up the  pieces and rebuild shattered lives in this impoverished country.

IPS reports bring home the dimensions of the tragedy from the  historical and the wider regional perspective, and strengthen local  input in partnership with The Haitian Times.

The Morning After: Haiti Earthquake Victims Can Only Rely on Each Other
A dispatch beginning at 10pm the night of the 12 January earthquake,  which resumes the following morning after IPS reporter, Ansel Herz, caught  some sleep in an open bus abandoned in downtown Port-Au-Prince. 
Credit: Ansel Herz

Mistrusting of Their Govt and UN, Haitians Place Hopes on US, Aristide
In Cite Soleil, Chanmas, Grand Goave, Tabarre, Leogane – almost everywhere
it seems – people are dismissive of UN peacekeepers and the Haitian government, while hopeful that US troops will help lead a robust aid and reconstruction effort. Many of them also ask for the return of ex-President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, who was pushed out in a 2004 US-backed coup.
Will US troops live up to the hopes some quake survivors have placed in them?
Credit: Ansel Herz

Canadian Troops Drop Off Food in Cite Soleil, Haiti
Haphazard aid distribution in Haiti. A nearby Digicel card vendor said, "There's a better a way to do it."
Credit: Ansel Herz



Columnist Service
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AMERICAS: THE BATTLE OVER VENEZUELA
  By Ignacio Ramonet
CUBA: STABILITY AND SECURITY
  By Joaquin Roy
WE MUST UNRAVEL THE SECRETS OF NATURE TO SUPPORT LIFE AND THE PLANET
  By Jose Mujica*
HUMAN RIGHTS SHOULD BE THE HEART OF THE MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS
  By Rowena McNaughton
MDGs: THE 2015 TARGET DATE LOOKS DIMMER THAN EVER
  By Supachai Panitchpakdi
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HaitiActionNet
National Coalition for Haitian Rights
Haiti Reborn
Caribbean Community
The Confederation of Haitian Workers (CTH)
Alternative Chance
Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti
Z Magazine Haiti Watch
United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti
Global Policy Forum - on U.N. Action in Haiti
World Bank
Enfofamn
KAY FANM
FONDASYON KONESANS AK LIBèTE (FOKAL)
Organisation of American States
Association of University Graduates Motivated for a Haiti with Rights
Haitian Press Agency
Haiti's Sustainable Organic Integrated Livelihood
Zanmi Lasante

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