April 23, 2010 6:46 PM

Haiti Wants Food Aid to Stop?

By
Sharyl Attkisson
(CBS)  Of all the things you've heard about earthquake aid to Haiti, here's something you probably didn't know: Haiti's government wants large-scale food assistance and free health care to stop.

If it's news to you, it was to CBS News too, when Katie Couric recently visited Haiti and spoke to Erin Boyd, a nutrition aide for UNICEF. Boyd disagrees with cutting back on aid, but told why it's being done.

"When you continue having a lot of food distributions, you lower the price of food so that people can't trade, and it disrupts markets, basically," Boyd said.

In other words, CBS News correspondent Sharyl Attkisson reports, there may be such a thing as too much help. The public outpouring is so generous it's interfering with the Haitian economy.

If food is free local farmers can't sell what they grow.

Desperately poor residents who aren't earthquake victims are moving into refugee camps for the free food and health care. But the government wants residents to be less dependent on foreign aid, not more.

Susan Reichle is with USAID, the U.S. agency that distributes foreign aid. It's already spent $562 million on Haiti relief.

"As they've requested that these large-scale food distributions end as well as some of the large-scale programs which are really pulling people into the camps, we're working with them. We're in complete agreement with them on this point," Reichle said.

Pulling back on aid means something a lot of American donors might find unthinkable. Even as many go without meals, relief food that's already made it to Haiti is now being sent to warehouses for future disasters. USAID calls it "prepositioning."

The Long Road Back: More Coverage

Help to Haiti "Not Good Enough"
The Struggle to Rebuild
The Long Road Back for Haiti's Children

The World Food Programme - the food aid branch of the U.N. - is also scaling back food aid at the request of the Haiti government, "prepositioning" food for future disasters.

The shift away from free food on a massive scale has been done quietly in Haiti and it has opened a can of worms. Relief officials who need to keep donations flowing worry that once word gets out, people will be less likely to give. Others say donations meant for earthquake relief shouldn't now be used for something else.

As of today, total donations to Haiti meet and exceed the biggest estimates of how much it will cost to rebuild - up to $14 billion. The record-breaking Hope for Haiti Telethon in January brought in more than $66 million. That's part of the $4 billion raised by non-government groups and charities. The U.S. government has given more than $1 billion and has pledged another billion-plus. Other countries and world bodies have pledged $8.75 billion over two years. That's $14.9 billion and counting.

With all that aid pouring in, some worry that it will feed corrupt and criminal elements rather than the needy. There are reports of gangs intercepting aid and selling food on the black market with impunity from high-ranking officials.

It's just one example of the complexities in play when trying to help the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere. There's money in the pipeline and food being sent to warehouses, while hundreds of thousands go hungry.

Copyright 2010 CBS. All rights reserved.
  • Sharyl Attkisson

    Sharyl Attkisson is a CBS News investigative correspondent based in Washington. All of her stories, videos and blogs are available here.

Add a Comment See all 30 Comments
by Jerrell23 May 17, 2010 8:43 AM EDT
A website full of free stuff is here just visit www.everythingfreesite.info
Reply to this comment
by Jerrell23 May 4, 2010 9:59 AM EDT
Many people in the U.S. are receiving free healthcare even though they thought they wouldnt apply.Just visit www.healthcare-provider.info
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by stxchick April 23, 2010 11:08 AM EDT
Where has all this aid been for the last 20 - 50 years?!? Support organizations that have been in there for years working to build infrastructure - like http://www.haitisupport.org/our-mission

Mathilde is from Haiti but lives with her husband on St. Croix, USVI. They have been working to better the lives of the rural haitans for years.

They go and do the work themselves - they have family that lives there.
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by mchoulj April 23, 2010 7:24 AM EDT
I wonder why it's okay for the Haitian government to be dependent on other countries and receive hundreds of millions of dollars a year in aid but it is not okay for the Haitian people to receive aid directly.
It is free enterprise that has destroyed the rice, beans, chicken, egg market in Haiti not free aid.
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by krisd999-2009 April 23, 2010 1:28 AM EDT
When government interferes in the free market with subsidies of all kinds, you get an economic system called cronyism. It is incredibly wasteful and destructive. By putting their farmers out of business, Haiti is being set up for perpetual famine like many african nations. This is well known, yet it is done all over the world. They should just hire haitians to sweep, clean up and rebuild and pay them cash. No handouts.
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by jgg000101 April 22, 2010 10:54 PM EDT
don't send food, just send money! lotsa money!
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by Jerrell23 April 22, 2010 7:37 PM EDT
Get free healthcare by searching at www.healthcare-provider.info just as i did
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by stxchick April 22, 2010 2:02 PM EDT
We should help the country of Haiti rebuild to the point they were prior to the earthquake. While it would be "nice" to make it much better - give them what they didn't have before - they as a country and a people are not prepared to live like that at this point. We have to allow their own country workings to resume as they were. This is how they lived. Yes, improvements need to happen there (even prior to the disaster) but there are groups that have been working there - and in the countryside villages of Haiti - to help the people put infrastructure, schools, medical clinics,etc. in place. Contribute to those organizations. It has to be done over time.

What we have in the USA and the rest of the non-3rd world countries is NOT what is going to work for them now or in the near future. You can paint a chicken coop all pretty, make it out of the best materials - but in the end, it's still just a chicken coop. They just aren't prepared to handle some of what we feel is needed there. They need clean water, they need infrastructure - but when we go messing too much at one time - it does disrupt the economics that have been at play there (and need to be in play for ppl to survive there) for years.
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by pragmatist1 April 22, 2010 10:43 AM EDT
....ah yes, the poor displaced persons apparently have sufficient money to purchase food and health care...why should anyone help countries like this? No matter what anyone tries to do to come to the aid of others in a time of disaster, the government of those countries invariably whine, moan and complain. And then when aid stops and they need help again, they whine, moan and complain, but this time because of no aid and no one helping them. Haiti should be ignored and left to its own devices, regardless of the outcome.
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by tsigili April 22, 2010 10:42 AM EDT
In other words, the true colors of the people of Haiti are showing?
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