PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) - The deadly earthquake that leveled
Haiti's capital more than two years ago brought a thread of hope: a
promise of renewal. With the United States taking the lead,
international donors pledged billions of dollars to help the country
"build back better," breaking its cycle of dependency.
But after the rubble was cleared and the dead buried, what the quake
laid bare was the depth of Haiti's dysfunction. Today, the fruits of an
ambitious, $1.8 billion U.S. reconstruction promise are hard to find.
Immediate, basic needs for bottled water, temporary shelter and medicine
were the obvious priorities. But projects fundamental to Haiti's
transformation out of poverty, such as permanent housing and electric
plants in the heavily hit capital of Port-au-Prince have not taken off.
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