World Bank Managing Director and Vice President for Latin America and the Caribbean to Visit Haiti

Published: 4 August 2010 y., Wednesday

Pasaulio Bankassd
The new World Bank Group Managing Director Sri Mulyani Indrawati and Vice President for Latin America and the Caribbean Pamela Cox will visit Haiti this week to review progress made in the country after the earthquake, and meet with Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive and other high-level officials.

This will be Ms. Indrawati’s first visit to Haiti where she will bring her expertise in post-disaster reconstruction, after playing a key role in rebuilding Aceh (Indonesia) in the aftermath of the December 2004 tsunami. Before joining the Bank on July 1st, Ms. Indrawati was Indonesia’s Minister of Finance since 2005. She also held the position of State Minister and Chair of the Indonesian National Development Planning Agency.

“The World Bank Group is committed to Haiti and its people,” said Indrawati. “We are working with the Government of Haiti and the international community to speed up reconstruction efforts and ensure that projects have tangible results that truly benefit the poor.”

World Bank Support to Haiti

To help Haiti recover from the January 12 earthquake, the World Bank Group has pledged US$479 million through June 2011. Of this amount, more than half has already been made available:

·         US$91 million in new resources from the International Development Agency (IDA) and trust funds have been approved to support reconstruction and development projects;

·         US$68 million from IDA have been spent in support of social and emergency reconstruction needs since January 2010;

·         US$39 million, Haiti’s full debt to the World Bank, have been cancelled; and

·         US$49 million have been made available by the Bank Group’s private sector arm, the International Finance Corporation (IFC), to support Haiti’s private sector, which has also disbursed US$7.6 million since the earthquake.

All World Bank funding has been in grant form since mid-2005.

“The Bank’s initial response following the earthquake focused on improving the lives of those affected while contributing to build the foundations for long-term recovery,” said Pamela Cox. “The US$240 million made available to Haiti to date have helped assess the impact of the tragedy, prepare and implement emergency infrastructure, education and community based projects to assist the people of Haiti and provide emergency funding to the private sector.”

Some of the results achieved with World Bank Group support include:

·         Offices were acquired and equipped for the Ministry of Economy and Finance and Tax Office (over 500 staff), enabling the Ministry to function and revenues to be collected.

·         More than 200,000 buildings have been assessed for structural damage.

·         Around 90,000 cubic meters of trash and debris were removed from key drainage canals in Port-au-Prince, reducing flood risk for temporary camps in the capital.

·         50,000 solar lanterns were purchased and distributed, increasing safety and reducing fire hazard and benefiting more than 200,000 people.

·         A transfer of US$3 million to the World Food Program has helped provide supplementary food to 200,000 children aged 6-23 months, while US$1 million to the Pan-American Health Organization has supported basic health care services to pregnant and lactating women and children from 0-24 months.

·         140,000 children are being funded to attend school, and 50,000 children in more than 1,200 schools are receiving a hot meal every day.

·         Six water supply systems were completed, benefiting 37,000 people in rural communities in the South, which are struggling to absorb the exodus from the capital.

·         IFC completed the structuring of the international bidding process for TELECO, which is bringing the country’s largest foreign direct investment since the earthquake—a US$100 million investment by Vietnam’s biggest mobile telephone operator, Viettel, to expand telecommunications services in Haiti.

Haiti Reconstruction Fund

At the request of the Government of Haiti, the World Bank established the Haiti Reconstruction Fund (HRF) in March 2010, in partnership with the Inter-American Development Bank and the United Nations.

Donors pledged about US$500 million to the HRF in March. To date, five donors have confirmed their pledges for a total of US$97.5 million, of which US$67 million have been received.

The HRF is one of several sources of post-earthquake reconstruction financing. The bulk of the resources pledged to Haiti at the March 31 donor conference (US$5.5 billion) will likely flow through bilateral donors and NGOs, and not through the HRF.

The first Government request for HRF financing was made on June 17th and, that same day, the HRF's Steering Committee allocated US$30 million for the provision of critical services to the Haitian people, to be channeled through the World Bank.

The Government, through the Interim Haiti Reconstruction Commission, sets the HRF's priorities and approves all requests for HRF financing, while the Haitian Minister of Finance Ronald Baudin chairs the HRF's Steering Committee.

 

Šaltinis: web.worldbank.org
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

World Bank Welcomes Steps by Swiss Government to Ensure Stolen Funds Go To Haiti

The World Bank Group welcomes the continued efforts of the Swiss Government to hand over to Haiti millions of stolen assets held by the Duvalier family in Switzerland, money that could be used for development purposes following the devastating earthquake in the Caribbean country. more »

MEPs in Kyiv: Ukraine's presidential election meets most international commitments

A delegation of eight MEPs confirmed on Monday that both rounds of presidential election in Ukraine met most of the country's international commitments. more »

EU sees science as part of solution to the crisis and vows to boost investment in R&D

European research ministers have made a commitment in San Sebastián to increase investment in R&D and to promote a culture of trust in scientists, without forgetting that research must be accountable to the public. more »

The ‘Treaty of Rome’ visits the America’s Cup

The sailing boat ‘Traité de Rome’ (Treaty of Rome) has docked in Valencia’s port to bring the Spanish Presidency of the European Union to those visiting the 33rd America’s Cup, which begins in the Mediterranean city on Monday. more »

SWIFT: MEPs to vote on backing or sacking EU/US data sharing deal

The rejection by MEPs on Parliament's justice committee of a controversial EU/US data sharing deal has set the scene for a transatlantic row if a majority of MEPs back their decision on Thursday. more »

The European Commission welcomes the full resumption of cooperation with Mauritania

The European Commission welcomes the Council Decision of 25 January 2010 fully re-establishing cooperation with Mauritania and confirms the resumption of enhanced political dialogue with Mauritania’s various political actors. more »

Trinidad Jiménez alerts us to the risk of social marginalisation in the UN

The European Union is alerted to the risk of some citizens losing their jobs due to the economical crisis and being permanently excluded from the labour market. more »

The EU and Central America agree on a work programme with the aim of finalising an Association Agreement in May

Commercial negotiators from Central American countries and from the European Commission concluded an informal three-day meeting at which they agreed a work schedule with a view to finalising an Association Agreement in May. more »

President of the Republic of Slovenia visits the ECB

The President of the Republic of Slovenia, Danilo Türk, visited the European Central Bank today. more »

The Spanish Presidency will continue to work to strengthen transatlantic relations

Transatlantic relations are a priority for the Spanish Presidency and Europe will continue to work with the US to strengthen these ties, said the Spanish Minister for Foreign Affairs and Cooperation, Miguel Ángel Moratinos, after receiving confirmation that President Barack Obama would not be travelling to Europe this spring to attend the annual EU-US summit. more »