Ma delivers aid for Haiti quake victims
DEBT RELIEF?: The president said nothing about reducing Haiti’s sizable
debt to Taiwan to help in reconstruction efforts when he met the Haitian prime
minister
By Ko Shu-ling
STAFF REPORTER, SANTO DOMINGO
Saturday, Jan 30, 2010, Page 1
President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) brought relief supplies to the Dominican Republic
for delivery to Haiti and proposed a long-term reconstruction project to help
the country’s earthquake-ravaged ally get back on its feet, hoping to inspire
more countries to follow suit.
Ma, who arrived in the Dominican Republic on Thursday morning, delivered 10
tonnes of relief supplies. They were to be transported by land from the
Dominican Republic to Haiti.
During his whirlwind visit, Ma held a joint meeting with Dominican President
Leonel Fernandez Reyna and Haitian Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive at the
presidential building.
The trio did not touch on the issue of debt reduction or cancellation for Haiti,
Presidential Office Spokesman Wang Yu-chi (王郁琦) said.
The Paris Club, the UK and, most recently, Canada have openly called for two of
Haiti’s biggest creditors — Taiwan and Venezuela — to pardon the debt the
Caribbean nation owes. Haiti reportedly owes Taiwan US$91 million.
Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty said international lenders should expunge
the debt so as not to encumber Haiti in its reconstruction effort.
Wang said they estimated the reconstruction project Ma proposed would cost US$10
million for the first year, including the US$5 million cash donation Taiwan has
pledged.
Ma has said the relocation and reconstruction project may take five to 10 years
or even longer, Wang said, adding that it was a long process and the
administration would implement the projects as planned or adjust them according
to the needs of the Haitian people.
“This is a pilot project,” Wang said. “We hope our efforts will encourage more
countries to follow suit.”
Wang said Fernandez invited Ma to attend a world leaders’ meeting he has called
for April 14 to discuss how to assist Haiti in its reconstruction projects, at
which Ma said a representative from Taiwan would be present, but did not commit
himself to attend.
Wang said the reconstruction project Ma had proposed would consist of four
parts.
The first focus would be public hygiene and medical assistance, Wang said.
Taiwan would send medical personnel to help Haiti prevent the spread of
diseases. It would also dispatch medical teams to set up checkup points to
provide medical services.
The second focus would be tents and prefabricated housing, he said. As the
rescue operation draws to an end, Wang said relocation and reconstruction
projects would then begin.
Ma said he hoped the Haitian government would find a suitable area with water
and electricity to set up tents for refugees before moving them into
prefabricated housing units.
Although the number of tents and prefabricated housing units Taiwan will send
was unknown at the moment, Wang said Ma proposed that Taiwan fund the
establishment of the settlement and name it “Village of Hope.”
Wang said that initially the administration hoped to provide 200 units for 1,000
people, but did not rule out increasing the number to 1,000 units for 5,000
people.
The third focus would be vocational training and employment assistance services
for people staying in the village, including farming and factory skills, Wang
said.
The Ma administration could ask for help from local agricultural missions or
send experts to help them grow rice and chicken, Wang said. If factories are to
be set up on the island of Hispaniola, which Haiti and the Dominican Republic
share, Wang said the Ma administration hoped they would be built in Haiti, and
if they are built in the Dominican Republic, Ma hopes a certain percentage of
Haitian workers will be hired.
ADOPTION PROGRAM
Because thousands of children lost their parents in the earthquake, Wang said Ma
also proposed an adoption program in which Taiwan’s government could work
together with private institutions. Taiwan has adopted nearly 200,000 orphans
from around the world, an outstanding record, Wang said.
Ma also met Consul to Haiti Chi Wang-teh (齊王德) at the airport before he and the
delegation left for Los Angeles on Thursday. He telephoned Ambassador to Haiti
Hsu Mien-sheng (徐勉生), who has been transferred to a hospital in Miami, Florida.
Chi and Hsu were sent to Santo Domingo to receive medical attention after being
pulled out of debris in Haiti’s capital, Port-au-Prince. They had been trapped
for six hours before rescuers found them.
Ma was to leave Los Angeles for Taiwan yesterday morning and is due back in
Taipei today.
CONCERN
Meanwhile, in Taipei, lawmakers yesterday voiced concern that Taiwan was being
ripped off following reports that Panama’s president used a plane provided by
Taipei for rescue missions as his private jet.
Local media have reported that Panamanian President Martin Torrijos took the
Legacy 600 for personal use, while Taipei-based TVBS news said he flew it to
Honduras for the inauguration of President Porfirio Lobo Sosa this week.
“We have to review our foreign aid policy so that we are not treated as a rich
fool,” Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Legislator Lo Shu-lei (羅淑蕾) said.
Democratic Progressive Party Legislator Chen Ting-fei (陳亭妃) demanded that the Ma
government explain whether it was engaging in “dollar diplomacy” with Panama.
The TVBS said Ma raised the issue during a meeting in Honduras with Torrijos,
who replied that the jet had been used on relief missions including to quake-hit
Haiti.
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