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Submitted by Caribbean Guyana Institute for Democracy

BROOKLYN, NEW YORK: The President of the New York based Caribbean Guyana Institute for Democracy, Rickford Burke, on Friday called on the United Nations (UN), US State Department, Organization of American States (OAS) and the Caribbean Community (Caricom), “to evacuate Haitians who have been injured in Tuesday’s devastating 7.0 earthquake to sister Caribbean States in the region for medical treatment, so as to avert further humanitarian catastrophe and to free-up resources and congestion in Port-au-Prince, the Haitian capital.”

Burke specifically called on Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrits of the neighboring Island of Dominica and Prime Minister Bruce Golding of Jamaica,  to “step up and help the Haitian people in this hour of crisis, and allow some of the wounded to be treated in their country.” He also endorsed a call for some injured Haitians as well as some who would become refugees, to be temporarily resettled in the South American sister Caricom State of Guyana, located along the Atlantic Ocean.

Burke said that “Guyana is a country that is 83,000 square miles large with a population of only 650,000, who are mainly concentrated along the Atlantic coastline, occupying only about 40% of the country.” Noting that “More Guyanese live outside of Guyana, with approximately one million living in North America and the Caribbean alone, he observed that with about 60% of Guyana uninhabited, that country can easily accommodate a large number Haitians, and that the international community will be obligated to help the Guyana government manage that process.

Guyana, which is 1326.91 miles from Haiti, is the only English-speaking South American State and is a member of Caricom. Caricom is headquartered in its capital city Georgetown. The former British colony is bordered by Suriname – also a Caricom State, Brazil and Venezuela. Trinidad and Tobago is its closest neighbor in the Caribbean.

Burke contended that the “Under the status quo ante, the Haitian health care system was extremely primitive and fragile and that that fragile system along with the physical infrastructure in Haiti are now in ruins and fundamentally lack the capacity to cope with possibly hundred of thousands of sick and wounded and the magnitude of the disaster and relief effort. Guyanese-American leader criticized Caricom countries for not offering to have the wounded medevaced to their States.

In an urgent letter to Former US President and UN Special Envoy to Haiti, Bill Clinton, State Department Counselor Cheryl Mills, Caricom Secretary General, Edwin Carrington and OAS Secretary, General José Miguel Insulza, the Institute’s head suggested that the three meet urgently with Caricom Leaders to discuss the issue, as “Time is of the essence and the images of the injured being either ignored or treated in hospital compounds, on roadsides and on floors are heart-wrenching.” He added that “Obviously the injured cannot receive acceptable medical care in Port-au-Prince and that medical personnel arriving in the city are already overwhelmed.”

“The lack of action is regrettable. There is absolutely no reason why neighboring Caribbean States cannot become staging areas for the sick and wounded on a larger, well coordinated scale, so as to free up the congestion of relief personnel, medical and other resources being currently flown directly into Haiti, which does not have the capacity or infrastructure at this point to facilitate such a huge, simultaneous recovery, humanitarian, relief and medical effort” Burke observed.

He expressed condolences to and solidarity with the Haitian people and said his organization is working with Haitian-American leaders to mobilize additional humanitarian and financial recourses for the relief effort.

The CGID President commended the Obama Administration for its swift response to the crisis in Haiti and praised US President Barrack Obama for pledging 100 million US dollars to help rebuild Haiti and for tasking former Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush to help mobilize resources to help Haiti.


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61 responses to “NY Caribbean Institute Calls For Haitians Injured In Quake To Be Medevaced To Caricom States”


  1. QuestionRickford Burke are you a clone of Alex Fergusson. Your Brains seems to be wired identically


  2. ac: I am not a new comer to advocacy on Haiti. I married an Haitian and when there and saw the suffering. I have always been an avid advocate for Haiti; even a measure of cursory research will substantiate this. I feel strongly about Caricom’s disengagement in Haiti. I am very engaged in the relief effort in New York, and am will to go there at a later stage to help “stand-up” the government and restore governance.


  3. @Rickford Burke

    tant mieux pour toi


  4. Don’t agree that people should not feel like they can’t criticize the relief effort. On CNN Anderson Cooper who is an American reporter told the story of poor folks in the villages not getting access to help. However much of the international relief was sent to the built up areas, hotels with tourists etc. It is important constructive criticism comes is taken, it is the only way the process can be improved.


  5. Keeping pressure on people to do what’s right is the only way to correct what’s wrong.The public has a vested interest
    in making sure the people of Haiti get the necessties that was sent to them.I
    applauded the media for their scrutiny.


  6. @ David who asked:

    “Based on news reports in the media the US authorities controlling the airport in Haiti refused to allow a Caricom mission including Prime Ministers to land, do you agree this should be happening?”

    CARICOM Leader cannot do anything for Haiti. A Field Hospital in the contents of 3.5 million affected – is insignificant.

    Thompson cannot even get it right at the QEH as it relates to medicines, meals, and equipment for dialysis patients.

    Secondly, it was the DLP that put elective surgeries on hold a few months ago.

    Jamaia is crumbling and hopes the IMF can save it. Skerrit is a puppet of Chavez, and Thompson does not have a plan for Barbados without a disaster.

    Pray tell, what would those jokers do in Haiti. Coordinate what? When Thompson and the others cannot even get CSME work?

    The American government is right: “Thompson, Golding and Skerrit Go Home.”

    “EVER SO WELCOME – WAIT FOR A CALL.”

    In contrast, remember Grenada: Remeber how Tom Adams and Eugenia Charles were at the table with the US?

    Look how our region has been D’ valued.


  7. Alex Fergusson

    • In contrast, remember Grenada: Remeber how Tom Adams and Eugenia Charles were at the table with the US?
    *************************************

    I know it must be hard now that the Consultancies have dried up and the gratuity has run out but you must take us all for fools with you constant repeating of statements like the above.

    Tom and Eugenia were at the table because the Americans wanted “puppets”, they wanted to say to the rest of the world “we were invited in”. Do you think Reagan or the US gave a fig about Tom or Eugenia? They were going to invade any way so Tom & Eugenia made it easy for them, they didn’t have to say the Cubans were there or the American Medical students were being threatened or we didn’t really have a reason but we will go in and look good on the Evening news.

    What the Americans did could have been accomplished in a couple of months with economic sanctions.

    I hope Mia isn’t paying you for those multiple submissions, she should save her money.

    At the table indeed.


  8. @ Sargeant,

    Tom and Eugenia, like Barrow, Owen Arthur, Grantley Adams, Henry Forde, Bree St. John and – The Hon. Mia Amor Mottley, Q.C., M.P., are brilliant.

    I do not remember any of them going across the world with a begging bowl or deporting Guyanese and other CARICOM nationals – including Haitians.

    But while Thompson’ inhumane, hard-line, iron-fist policy will see even Haitians being deported – not a Chinese.

    Imagine also that in a DLP’s Barbados – Chinese are here working but Barbadians are on the bread-line.


  9. Where is T & T in all of this? Are they not playing their part in the “aid to Haiti” effort? They have the money……I read about $1 (US) million, up front aid, but this blog has been remarkably silent on any other activity. Are they not a part of the Caricom family. What’s happening there?


  10. It was reported in the Bahamiam press yesterday that former Jamaican PM has been appointed to develop a document to determine cost on behalf of Latin America, EU, Caribbean etc to guide the relief/reconstruction exercise. PM Ingram indicated the Caricom countries will determine its contribution at a later date.

  11. the haitian lady Avatar

    thank God that serious country are helping US SERIOUS COUNTRY

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