Nobody Remembers Us: Failure to Protect Women's and Girls' Right to Health and Security in Post Earthquake Haiti

Publication language
English
Pages
84pp.
Date published
01 Jan 2011
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Children & youth, Disasters, Earthquakes, Gender, Urban
Countries
Haiti
Organisations
Human Rights Watch

 

Based on research conducted in Port-au-Prince in late 2010 and early 2011—and
interviews with 128 women and girls living in 15 displacements camps in 7 of the 12
earthquake-affected communes—this report looks at women’s and girls’ access to
reproductive and maternal care in post-earthquake Haiti. It examines the impact that food
insecurity has on reproductive and maternal health; the reliance on transactional sex that
some women and girls have developed in order to survive; and their vulnerability to, and
the consequences of, gender-based violence (GBV). It also considers Haiti’s human rights
obligations, and the need for mutual accountability between the government and donor
states and non-state actors in the country.
The report finds, 18 months after the earthquake, the voices of women affected by the
earthquake have been excluded from the reconstruction process—even though women are
integral to the country’s economy. Moreover, initial optimism felt by international aid agencies and donors that access to maternal health would improve in areas affected by
the disaster has not been realized for all women and girls. This is despite an outpouring of
international support and of new, free services run by international nongovernmental
organizations (NGOs) that promised to remove the geographic and economic barriers that
had historically prevented women and girls from accessing health care.
For the women and girls interviewed by Human Rights Watch in the camps, their enjoyment
human rights, such as the rights to life and health, remains poor (not withstanding
benefits accruing from the presence of free care and experts on the ground), and most of
them lack basic information that would allow them to access available services. Indeed, as
is widely recognized, Human Rights Watch found evidence of three types of delay that
contribute to pregnancy-related mortality: delay in deciding to seek appropriate medical
care; delay in reaching an obstetric facility; and delay in receiving adequate care when
reaching a facility. For the women and girls we interviewed, these delays occurred because
women and girls did not recognize signs of early labor or were unfamiliar with a new
neighborhood; because the places where they previously received care had been
destroyed in the earthquake; because of distance, security concerns, or transportation
costs; and because of inadequate care at facilities.