Haiti earthquake diary: Haiti's leaders speak, finally
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| Port-au-Prince, Haiti
Sunday, Jan. 17
I head down to this "government center" - the police station where Haitian officials are convening to run things - that Patrick Delatour, the minister of tourism, has told me about.
President Ren茅 Pr茅val has a reputation for being relaxed. The last time I did an interview with him, he came into the Yellow Room of the National Palace where we were waiting. After giving me a warm hug 鈥 I鈥檝e known him long before he was in the Palace - he picked up the cameraman鈥檚 tripod and carried it himself into his office, where a cabinet meeting was going on. He didn鈥檛 want to make the ministers relocate so instead he just announced that he would temporarily suspend the meeting, do the interview with us, the Lehrer NewsHour, and then resumed after we left.
Who does that?! Just a few months ago, he called up my dentist friend Francoise, and made his own dental appointment. On one hand, it鈥檚 great that Pr茅val doesn鈥檛 think he鈥檚 better than anyone else. On the other hand, I would think the president of Haiti has other, more important, things to do.
Today, I've arrived in time for a presidential press conference. The venue redefines low key. It's what you might expect in a high school auditorium, only this is in the dusty courtyard in front of the old police station.
Pr茅val appears in a short-sleeved, striped, button-down shirt and slacks, sits in a folding chair at a card table and introduces a representative of the Spanish government, Maria Teresa Fern谩ndez de la Vega, and the wife of the president of the Dominican Republic.
They talk about their commitment to Haiti. It's hard not to be cynical. But everyone is a friend to Haiti when there is trouble and they get the limelight. I just wonder when the lights are off, will they be good for their word?
Pr茅val isn鈥檛 one for words. Part of that persona I admire. He doesn鈥檛 put on airs, and he doesn鈥檛 speak a lot of "blahblahblah." It鈥檚 a strategy, I think, to only do what he says he鈥檚 going to do, and since he doesn鈥檛 know what he鈥檚 going to do, he doesn鈥檛 say anything. On the other hand, the Haitian people are frustrated because they haven鈥檛 heard anything from their leadership yet.
He speaks in French. It is then translated into Spanish, English, and Creole. He says that to ensure the security of his people he needs to understand the dimension of the problem. Aid has to be mobilized, coordinated, and well distributed. And finally, he says that he understands the risk of instability - with all the prisoners in Port-au-Prince on the streets (the prison collapsed), an already weak police force of 3,500 needs to be bolstered by external forces.
At his side is Haiti's first lady, Madame Elisabeth Delatour-Pr茅val. She isn鈥檛 introduced, stands unassumingly by the side of the table in a tasteful white cotton pants suit. She鈥檚 a small, attractive woman, bright and involved in government operations.
I wish there were more active women in the government. The Minister of Information is a woman whom I鈥檝e known for nearly 20 years, and when she sees me after the conference she smiles. 鈥Ou pa janm lage nou鈥 she says, 鈥測ou haven鈥檛 forgotten us." I think about telling her that I鈥檝e tried, numerous times, to forget Haiti, but something always pulls me back.
Half an hour later, I join a small group of journalists interviewing Haiti's prime minister, Jean-Max Bellerive. This is the first time I鈥檝e met him.
Like Pr茅val, he鈥檚 dressed casually, in a short-sleeve shirt and has a relaxed manner but speaks with intensity. He says that 77,000 bodies have been collected so far and he suspects there will be well over 100,000, not counting those already burned. He says that about 100,000 people are already receiving aid. He鈥檚 frustrated about aid coming in and sitting at the airport. He's expressing to what many Haitians are saying.
-- For all stories, blogs, and updates on Haiti after the earthquake, go to The Monitor's Haiti page.