Thank you.
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for giving us the opportunity to testify in these precincts about the Canadian government's participation in the vast reconstruction, or "refoundation", process that our country of origin needs after the murderous earthquake that shook it on January 12.
First, on behalf of the Haitian community in Canada, on behalf of the Haitian people and on behalf of myself, I want to say thank you to the Canadian Parliament which mobilized around the issue, thank you to the Canadian people, thank you to the government for its support and its assistance.
The day after the earthquake, the Canadian government expressed its condolences to the Haitian government and people. It took the opportunity to announce significant aid. In addition to that there was the contribution by the Canadian public, which it decided to match. We also have to consider that its offers were adjusted as the damage and need arose. These are all concrete actions that must be applauded and for which we must be grateful.
The Canadian government also deployed heavy equipment to help save many lives of people trapped in the rubble. It also sent specialized teams capable of dealing with this catastrophic situation. The work done by those men and women was very helpful and much appreciated. They cleared some roads in the southeast, and particularly in Jacmel. They treated the victims and put up tents for the homeless. They provided medications, and in short they contributed greatly to improving the fate of our brothers and sisters there.
We must note that the Canadian government brought our fellow Canadians home and recognize that act properly, because it allowed a lot of stressed out, anxious families to take a breath and return to relatively normal life. We should also mention the efforts made by the Canadian government to bring adopted children, to allow the parents of those children to get them home quickly. We are talking here about Operation Stork.
Through the Canadian International Development Agency, the Canadian government promised a lot of things: building hospitals, buildings to house the various government departments, training public servants, and so on. Prime Minister Harper's trip to Haiti, on board a military plane to distribute drugs and sanitation equipment, must not go unnoticed. It demonstrated his sympathy with the Haitian people and the determination of this government to support the Haitian leaders. The Haitian community took note of all these actions. In addition, the efforts of Canadian missions or NGOs on the ground were palpable.
The Canadian Red Cross, Oxfam-Québec, CIDA, the Canadian Embassy in Haiti, all these institutions did their jobs remarkably. The Haitian people will remember, and will also remember what should be done.
The Canadian government has shown generosity to our victims, the Canadian government was one of the first to answer "here" on the ground. Its financial contribution is significant. The human resources deployed in Haiti have been very helpful. But considering the extent of the situation, the Haitian community's expectations are and remain unmet. Unmet, for the simple and good reason that many of our brothers and sisters are still sleeping in makeshift tents when the rainy season has already started, the season that will be followed by cyclone and hurricane season. The situation is going to get worse. Unmet, because nothing has been done by the federal government to facilitate participation by the Haitian diaspora living in Canada in the reconstruction process.
The Department of Foreign Affairs did facilitate participation by a Canadian delegation composed of Haitians at the Washington Conference. However, we have to go beyond conferences. Many of us in the diaspora would like to be on the ground. We are just waiting for an opening from the federal government. The Haitian community's expectations are and remain unmet because the federal government has not announced its immigration policy.
While Quebec is talking about family reunification, the federal government, when it comes to new measures, is proposing that we put "Haiti" on the envelopes so applications from Haitians will be given priority processing.
We would draw the attention of committee members to the fact that this measure is not sufficient for a country that has been hit by this kind of disaster. We are not asking the federal government to open its doors to one and all. But if Quebec is proposing to admit 3,000 additional Haitians, the federal government can ask the other provinces to follow Quebec's example. In the face of a tragedy like this, the language barrier will not hold up.
Other measures can be made more flexible. For example, why can a child not sponsor their mother or their aunt or uncle? The Haitian concept of family is much broader than the one applied by the federal government. So we think there is urgency and danger in delaying. The federal government can do better. It can start, for example, by regularizing the status of refugee claimants. That is another measure that should be reviewed, and I think this is the time to do it.
When a husband or wife has to wait three or four years to bring the other partner here, that is a serious problem. After so long, the relationship becomes very fragile. As a result, there are separations and single-parent families, and children drop out of school and are delinquent. We think the federal government has to look at this issue. As the director of a woman's centre, I know what I'm talking about. I can give you various examples of this problem, which in my opinion deserves special attention.
We applaud the federal government's generosity to our brothers and sisters who are victims of the earthquake, because it decided, for example, to match all money collected from the Canadian public. But do you know that some NGOs working with vulnerable segments of Haitian society are no longer being funded by CIDA? It seems that the government is giving with one hand and taking with the other, because those vulnerable populations have become more vulnerable. At a time when groups of women, peasants, are in desperate straits after this terrible earthquake, some NGOs are having to discontinue their projects, abandoning these people in their misfortune and their misery, telling them that reconstruction will happen soon. The needs are upstream and downstream at the same time. There must be consistency in order to be effective. The Canadian government's involvement in reconstruction must not prevent CIDA from working with local NGOs.
I will close by saying this, ladies and gentlemen. Whatever your political affiliation, your political ideology, I call on you for what you have done or what you can do to help these people, these women and children who are rotting in misery, hunger and thirst, in the heat and cold. Their suffering knows no political stripe. So I call on your, members of this committee, on behalf of all the women in the world who are standing with the women of Haiti, to make yourselves heard or to bring your expertise and strength to bear to help them relieve their inhuman suffering. The Haitian community, the community organizations, believe in all of Parliament, to once again help this small country whose population wants to continue travelling the path of human existence.
Thank you for your attention.