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Haiti: RecoveryHAITI: After emergency funding – recoveryDAKAR, 22 January 2010 (IRIN) – Donor governments, individuals and corporations have responded swiftly and generously to the Haiti earthquake, but funding experts are concerned donors will pour resources into emergency relief at the expense of recovery.
So far donors have funded 35 percent of the UN’s US$562-million flash appeal, although $952 million has been pledged. But the early recovery sector of the appeal still has no contributions. Too often donors channel their contributions to immediate relief operations without due consideration to medium- and long-term recovery and rehabilitation, Ben Ramalingam, head of research and development at NGO accountability network ALNAP, told IRIN. Recovery efforts such as building medium-term shelters and re-establishing people’s livelihoods must start during the relief phase, Ramalingam said. Over the longer term, aid agencies and governments must aim to “build back better”, said Brendan Gormley, head of the UK NGO fundraising network, the Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC). This involves revising building codes and improving building standards, requiring a lot of resources over a long time, he said. Head of external relations at the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in New York, Shoko Arakaki, reflected the views of most people IRIN spoke to when she said existing financing mechanisms failed to meet such needs. “Recovery-wise, we are too far behind… Coordination mechanisms are not in place to be able to respond properly on an effective, timely basis,” she said. “Everyone knows this and everyone talks about it, but there is no concrete idea to change the system.” Improving Haiti Recovery Funds
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