Monday, 18 December 2006, 14:01 GMT
UN launches $98m Haiti aid appeal
The UN has made an appeal for $98m (£50.26m) to help Haiti's transition.
The appeal, for the period 2006-2007, aims to strengthen Haiti's government and to help it meet humanitarian needs.
It is also aimed at "ensuring that authorities are better prepared in the event of natural disasters", said Joel Boutroue of the UN's Haiti mission.
"All indicators show that Haiti continues to be the poorest country in the northern hemisphere," Mr Boutroue told journalists.
Mr Boutroue, who is the UN's deputy special representative in Haiti, launched the appeal in Geneva.
He said the appeal had three main goals:
- to address insecurity in Haiti's shanty towns
- to improve the situation in rural areas and thus stem the exodus to the cities
- to strengthen the capacity of the government.
More than half of Haiti's 8.4 million population live below the extreme poverty line of $1 a day, according to the UN.
A Brazilian-led UN peacekeeping force has been deployed in the country since 2004, after a revolt that ousted then-President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
E-mail this to a friend
Related to this story:
Haiti tops world corruption table
(06 Nov 06 |
Business
)
Haiti donors in efficiency pledge
(30 Nov 06 |
Americas
)
Two UN peacekeepers die in Haiti
(11 Nov 06 |
Americas
)
US eases weapons embargo on Haiti
(11 Oct 06 |
Americas
)
Fierce clashes in Haitian capital
(20 Jul 06 |
Americas
)
Timeline: Haiti
(10 Jun 06 |
Country profiles
)
Country profile: Haiti
(09 Jun 06 |
Country profiles
)
RELATED INTERNET LINKS
BBC Caribbean Service
UN Stabilisation Mission in Haiti
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites
News Front Page
|
Africa
|
Americas
|
Asia-Pacific
|
Europe
|
Middle East
|
South Asia
|
UK
|
Business
|
Health
|
Science & Environment
|
Technology
|
Entertainment
|
Also in the news
|
Have Your Say
|
NewsWatch | Notes | Contact us | About BBC News | Profiles | History