The United Nations is
saying for the first time that it was involved in the introduction of cholera
to Haiti and needs to do "much more" to end the suffering of those
affected, estimated at more than 800,000 people.
Associated
Press report continues:
Researchers
say there is ample evidence that cholera was introduced to Haiti's biggest
river in October 2010 by inadequately treated sewage from a U.N. peacekeeping
base. The United Nations has never accepted responsibility, and has answered
lawsuits on behalf of victims in U.S. courts by claiming diplomatic immunity.
U.N.
deputy spokesman Farhan Haq's statement referring to the U.N.'s "own
involvement," which was sent to The Associated Press on Thursday, came a
step closer to an admission of at least some responsibility and was welcomed by
lawyers for the victims.
"This
is a major victory for the thousands of Haitians who have been marching for
justice, writing to the U.N. and bringing the U.N. to court," said Mario
Joseph, a Haitian human rights attorney whose law firm has led a high-profile
claim on behalf of 5,000 cholera victims who blame the U.N. for introducing the
disease.
In
a decision issued late Thursday, a U.S. federal appeals panel in New York
upheld immunity for the UN and affirmed a lower court's 2015 judgment
dismissing that case. Cholera victims and their lawyers have 90 days to decide
if they will seek an appeal with the U.S. Supreme Court.
Meanwhile,
Haq said that the United Nations has been considering a series of options, and
"a significantly new set of U.N. actions" will be presented publicly
within the next two months.
He
told reporters later that a U.N.-appointed panel already looked into the U.N.'s
involvement. It found that a local contractor failed to properly sanitize the
waste at the U.N. base.
"We've
been trying to see exactly what we can do about our own particular role as this
has been going on" and how "to bring this outbreak to a close,"
he said.
Haq
wouldn't say whether reparations were under consideration.
His
statement on U.N. involvement was first reported by The New York Times.
Five
U.N. human rights experts criticized the United Nations in a letter to top U.N.
officials late last year for its "effective denial of the fundamental
right of the victims of cholera to justice."
At
least one lawsuit was dismissed because of the U.N.'s diplomatic immunity
claim.
Haq
reiterated Thursday that the U.N.'s legal position in claiming diplomatic
immunity "has not changed."
According
to government figures, cholera has sickened more than 800,000 people, or about
7 percent of Haiti's population, and has killed more than 9,200. As of March,
it was killing an average of 37 people a month.
Haiti
is the poorest country in the Western hemisphere and only 24 percent of
Haitians have access to a toilet. Sewage is rarely treated and safe water
remains inaccessible to many.
At
a dusty crossroads on the outskirts of Haiti's capital, local residents
gathered Thursday at a trash-clogged stream to wash clothes and bathe.
"So
now they are going to find a way to clean the disease from the country? It's
been here for years and it seems like it is here to stay," said laborer
Jhony Nordlius as he pushed a wheelbarrow past a fetid canal where children
were splashing and collecting garbage.
Maxcilus
Vale, who ekes out a living shining shoes by the trash-clogged waterway, was
more hopeful about the UN's statement.
"Maybe
now we'll get more sanitation and water treatment to help make cholera go away.
I hope so because it has harmed many people," said Vale, as he washed his
socks in a roadside pool of stagnant water.
Researchers
said cholera was first detected in the central Artibonite Valley and cited
evidence that it was introduced to Haiti's biggest river from a U.N. base where
Nepalese troops were deployed as part of a peacekeeping operation which has
been in the country since 2004. Cholera is endemic in Nepal.
In
December 2012, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon announced a US$2.27 billion
initiative to help eradicate cholera in Haiti and the neighboring Dominican
Republic, which share the island of Hispaniola, but the ambitious 10-year plan
is underfunded. According to a report last November, only US$307 million has
been received.
Haq
said the announcement of U.N. plans for new action to address cholera was made
in response to a draft report by the U.N. special investigator on extreme
poverty and human rights.
Ahead
of its release, likely in late September, he said "we wanted to take this
opportunity to welcome this vital report."
Haq said its findings and recommendations "will be a valuable contribution to the U.N. as we work towards a significantly new set of U.N. actions."
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