Thank you very much, Mr. Payne.
Like you, I felt an extreme surge of pride when I saw the work that was being done. I had the extreme pleasure of visiting Haiti just two weeks ago, and saw first-hand the type of extraordinary work that the men and women in uniform are doing there. They're doing it, as you know, in conjunction with other departments—with CIDA, of course, and Foreign Affairs—but the enablers in this mission, let's be clear, were the Canadian Forces. They arrived there within 20 hours and there was a reconnaissance team on the ground.
I can't be any more stark than to say that they saved lives. The medical staff who were there set up a hospital. They treated in the past month over 20,000 people, some of them for grievous injuries. They delivered babies. They continue to treat injured people in the aftermath of that terribly devastating earthquake.
They also took part in other life-saving activities. They provided close to three million litres of water during the time they were there. That's more than an Olympic-sized swimming pool of water--clean, potable water.
Obviously in the early days they helped to pull people from the wreckage and to locate people who were under crushed buildings. What struck me when travelling around places such as Jacmel, Leogane, and the capital, Port-au-Prince, was that it was as if a giant had stepped on those communities. The buildings were crushed. They were pancaked because of the inadequacy of the cement and the structural durability of many of those buildings. Some grievous injuries resulted.
Canadian Forces were able to get there quickly, in large part because of the C-17 aircraft that our government purchased. The utility of that aircraft was on full display. We were able to move in equipment and personnel very quickly to have maximum effect.
With the able assistance of personnel aboard the HMCS Halifax and HMCS Athabaskan, we were able to be there quickly to provide life-saving equipment and life-saving personnel to that country at its most dire time.
We have a long-standing history and we'll be there for a long time into the future, but the Canadian Forces, in my view, performed brilliantly, in record time. While we're drawing down now, as I mentioned, we are handing off and transitioning to other agencies, including CIDA, but non-governmental agencies as well.
The other extraordinary part of this story is the interoperability that was demonstrated, our ability to work with the international community. We had a small number of personnel in Haiti prior to this disaster, through MINUSTAH, the UN mission to Haiti. We've doubled our complement there. That will remain as a permanent fixture. We'll have more Canadian Forces personnel in the aftermath of this disaster.
But your point is well made. They rolled out very quickly, and they had an immediate impact. As well, because of their language skills and their cultural understanding of Haiti, as many had been there before—many of the members of the Royal 22e Régiment from CFB Valcartier had previous experience—they interacted in a way that was compassionate, that was polite. They asked first how they could help. That went a long way.
We worked closely with the needs as identified by the Haitian government, and I think the Prime Minister and the President of Haiti...in my discussions with them and with other officials there, have nothing but admiration, respect, and gratitude for what Canada was able to contribute in this whole-of-government mission.
Perhaps I'll just ask the admiral to speak briefly to the role of the navy, because the navy really, in my view, was one of the biggest moving parts in our ability to respond to Haiti.