European police force headed for Haiti

Published: 27 January 2010 y., Wednesday

Port o Prense vis dar bandoma surasti išgyvenusiųjų po galingo žemės drebėjimo (Haitis, 2010 m.)
At least 300 military police from the European Union are headed for Haiti to help maintain order in the quake-stricken country. France, Italy, Spain, Portugal and the Netherlands will contribute to the force.

The EU will also provide engineers and equipment to clear roads and support efforts to deliver aid arriving by sea. Haiti’s main port was heavily damaged in the earthquake.

EU foreign ministers agreed to the deployment on Monday following a UN appeal for help with crowd control and aid distribution. The UN is coordinating the relief effort. The ministers also decided to set up an office in Brussels to coordinate military and security assistance.

Also Monday, about 20 countries and organisations, including the EU, met in Montreal to arrange an international donor conference and set priorities for rebuilding the country.

The EU has already offered more than €400m to Haiti. About half will be redirected from funds previously earmarked for the Caribbean nation.

Two weeks after the disaster, the relief effort has shifted to helping the desperate survivors. EU experts in Haiti report progress in tackling the logistical gridlocks that initially plagued relief efforts. But with hundreds of thousands homeless, shelter is a growing problem.

“The needs are mammoth, the organisation massive and the coordination colossal, but little by little things are coming together,” says Susana Perez Diaz of ECHO, the EU’s humanitarian aid department.

Nearly 700 EU experts are in Haiti, coordinating contributions of food, medicine, blankets, tents, water and fuel.

Meanwhile, fundraising for the victims is gaining momentum in Europe as around the world. In one example, France Telecom, the national phone company, is letting customers donate to the French Red Cross and two other charities via text messages for a month.

The EU has long been one of Haiti’s main donors. Last year it set aside €7m to combat malnutrition and child mortality and prepare the country for a humanitarian crisis or natural disaster.

 

Šaltinis: ec.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Millennium development goals: time to shift gear

Recommendations on how EU countries can meet their pledges for fighting hunger, poverty and disease. more »

France moving towards burka baning

France is moving towards a ban on wearing face-covering Islamic veils in public. Next month the government set to examine a bill banning the burka, amid heated debate over womens rights and religious freedom. more »

China honours earthquake victims

Flags flew at half mast around China, as the country stopped for three minutes to honour the victims of a 6.9 magnitude earthquake in Yushu, which left at least 2, 064 people dead and 175 missing. more »

First visit of Commissioner Piebalgs to Haiti: launch of the first EU-funded projects for reconstruction

Andris Piebalgs, EU Commissioner for Development, will travel to Haiti on 23-24 April 2010, to launch the first projects for reconstruction that will be funded by the EU. more »

European air space gradually starts to reopen

The Spanish Secretary of State for the EU, Diego López Garrido, and the European Commissioner for Transport, Siim Kallas, in the European Parliament on Tuesday defended the management of the air crisis caused by the eruption of an Icelandic volcano and said that they were confident that the measures adopted by the EU-27 will allow air space to progressively reopen. more »

Flights in Limbo

Stranded in Frankfurt. Volcanic ash from Iceland continues to ground flights across Europe where officials say about 5,000 took off in Europe Sunday compared with the 24,000 that normally would have flown. more »

More power, less plume

Iceland’s Meteorological Office reports tremors within an erupting volcano gained power on Sunday, while the massive plume of ash above its fiery core dropped off radar. more »

Volcanic ash cloud: President Barroso launches European Commission action to address economic consequences

European Commission President Barroso today decided to set up an ad-hoc group to assess the impact of the situation created by the volcanic ash cloud on the air travel industry and the economy in general. more »

Pope visited Malta

Pope Benedict holds Sunday mass in Malta. The Pope’s visit comes at a time when the Catholic Church has been under pressure surrounding a series of sex abuse scandals, and ahead of the Pope’s meeting with sex abuse victims. more »

Warm welcome for MEP observers by voters in first Sudan elections in 25 years

Two MEPs lead the EU's monitoring of the first Sudanese multi-party general elections in nearly 25 years. more »