Fighting Fire in Haiti
By Alexis Erkert
Source: Toward FreedomMonday, April 02, 2012
http://www.zcommunications.org/fighting-fire-in-haiti-by-alexis-erkert
When police and the landowner commanded Michelène Pierre to vacate her tent on a Sunday afternoon so that they could light it on fire, she responded: If you want to light me on fire along with this entire camp, go ahead. Im not leaving. The police bypassed her tent, but continued to threaten other residents of Camp Kozbami, setting flame to six tents.
Camp Kozbami is the fifth camp to be arsoned in two months. As landowners and the government push to close camps inhabited by those displaced by the earthquake that rocked Haiti 26 months ago, a reported 94,632 individuals are facing forced eviction.
Residents of the 660 displacement camps scattered throughout the Port-au-Prince area are experiencing increasing levels of threats and violence. Repeated acts of arson have both killed six people and displaced hundreds. Though cramped living conditions and a lack of available water during Haitis dry season have made camps vulnerable to accidental fires, camp organizers believe that all the recent fires have been deliberate.
Until her own tent was burned down, Arlette Célissaint lived in Camp Lycèe Toussaint. At a press conference on Friday, March 23, Célissaint and four other camp residents described the horror of waking up at 2:00 in the morning to a camp engulfed in flames. Fire took over... We were all in our tents, all asleep and suddenly it was, Run! and everyone started to get up and run. There were people burned on the spot and six went to the hospital