Haiti: Mud
cakes become
staple diet
as cost of
food soars
beyond a
family's
reach
With little
cash and
import
prices
rocketing
half the
population
faces
starvation
By Rory
Carroll in
Port-au-Prince
29/07/08
"The
Guardian" --
- At first
sight the
business
resembles a
thriving
pottery. In
a dusty
courtyard
women mould
clay and
water into
hundreds of
little
platters and
lay them out
to harden
under the
Caribbean
sun.
The
craftsmanship
is rough and
the finished
products are
uneven. But
customers do
not object.
This is Cité
Soleil,
Haiti's most
notorious
slum, and
these
platters are
not to hold
food. They
are food.
Brittle and
gritty - and
as revolting
as they
sound -
these are
"mud cakes".
For years
they have
been
consumed by
impoverished
pregnant
women
seeking
calcium, a
risky and
medically
unproven
supplement,
but now the
cakes have
become a
staple for
entire
families.
It is not
for the
taste and
nutrition -
smidgins of
salt and
margarine do
not disguise
what is
essentially
dirt, and
the Guardian
can testify
that the
aftertaste
lingers -
but because
they are the
cheapest and
increasingly
only way to
fill
bellies.
"It stops
the hunger,"
said Marie-Carmelle
Baptiste,
35, a
producer,
eyeing up
her stock
laid out in
rows. She
did not
embroider
their
appeal. "You
eat them
when you
have to."
These days
many people
have to. The
global food
and fuel
crisis has
hit Haiti
harder than
perhaps any
other
country,
pushing a
population
mired in
extreme
poverty
towards
starvation
and revolt.
Hunger burns
are called
"swallowing
Clorox", a
brand of
bleach.
The UN's
Food and
Agriculture
Organisation
predicts
Haiti's food
import bill
will leap
80% this
year, the
fastest in
the world.
Food riots
toppled the
prime
minister and
left five
dead in
April.
Emergency
subsidies
curbed
prices and
bought calm
but the
cash-strapped
government
is gradually
lifting
them. Fresh
unrest is
expected.
According to
the UN,
two-thirds
of Haitians
live on less
than 50p a
day and half
are
undernourished.
"Food is
available
but people
cannot
afford to
buy it. If
the
situation
gets worse
we could
have
starvation
in the next
six to 12
months,"
said
Prospery
Raymond,
country
director of
the UK-based
aid agency
Christian
Aid.
Until
recently
this
Caribbean
nation,
which vies
with
Afghanistan
for
appalling
human
development
statistics,
had been
showing
signs of
recovery:
political
stability,
new roads
and
infrastructure,
less gang
warfare. "We
had been
going in the
right
direction
and this
crisis
threatens
that," said
Eloune
Doreus, the
vice-president
of
parliament.
As
desperation
rises so
does
production
of mud
cakes, an
unofficial
misery
index. Now
even bakers
are
struggling.
Trucked in
from a
clay-rich
area outside
the capital,
Port-au-Prince,
the mud is
costlier but
cakes still
sell for
1.3p each,
about the
only item
immune from
inflation.
"We need to
raise our
prices but
it's their
last resort
and people
won't
tolerate
it,"
lamented
Baptiste,
the Cité
Soleil
baker.
Vendors of
other foods
who have
increased
prices have
been left
with unsold
stock. In
the Policard
slum, a
jumble of
broken
concrete
clinging to
a
mountainside,
the Ducasse
family
tripled the
price of its
fritters
because of
surging
flour
prices. "Our
sales have
fallen by
half," said
Jean Ducasse,
49, poking
at his tray
of
shrivelled
wares.
The signs of
crisis are
everywhere.
Aid agency
feeding
centres
reported
that the
numbers
seeking help
have
tripled. At
a centre in
the Fort
Mercredi
slum
rail-thin
women
cradled
infants with
yellowing
hair, a
symptom of
malnutrition.
"Now we're
having to
feed the
mothers as
well as the
babies,"
said
Antonine
Saint-Quitte,
a nurse.
In rural
areas the
situation
seems even
worse,
prompting a
continued
drift to the
slums and
their mirage
of
opportunities.
Lillian
Guerrick,
56, a
subsistence
farmer near
Cap Haitien,
yanked her
seven
grandchildren
from school
because
there was
barely money
for food let
alone fees.
"I've no
choice," she
said, a
touch
defensive,
amid wizened
corn stalks.
Anecdotal
evidence
suggests
school
attendance
nationwide
has dropped
and that
those who do
make it to
class are
sometimes
too hungry
to
concentrate.
"I use jokes
to try to
stimulate my
students, to
wake them
up," said
Smirnoff
Eugene, 25,
a
Port-au-Prince
teacher.
Border
crossings to
the
Dominican
Republic are
jammed with
throngs of
merchants
hunting
lower prices
in their
relatively
prosperous
neighbour.
"Beep beep,
out of the
way!" yelled
one teenage
boy,
sweating,
veins
throbbing,
as he heaved
a
wheelbarrow
impossibly
overloaded
with onions
through a
crowd at
Ouanaminthe's
border
bridge.
Haiti's woes
stem from
global
economic
trends of
higher oil
and food
prices, plus
reduced
remittances
from migrant
relatives
affected by
the US
downturn.
What makes
the country
especially
vulnerable,
however, is
its almost
total
reliance on
food
imports.
Domestic
agriculture
is a
disaster.
The slashing
and burning
of forests
for farming
and charcoal
has degraded
the soil and
chronic
under-investment
has rendered
rural
infrastructure
at best
rickety, at
worst
non-existent.
The woes
were
compounded
by a
decision in
the 1980s to
lift
tariffs,
when
international
prices were
lower, and
flood the
country with
cheap
imported
rice and
vegetables.
Consumers
gained and
the IMF
applauded
but domestic
farmers went
bankrupt and
the
Artibonite
valley, the
country's
breadbasket,
atrophied.
Now that
imports are
rocketing in
price the
government
has vowed to
rebuild the
withered
agriculture
but that is
a herculean
task given
scant
resources,
degraded
soil and
land
ownership
disputes.
There is a
hopeful
precedent. A
growing
franchise of
localised
dairies
known as Let
Agogo
(Creole for
Unlimited
Milk) has
organised
small
farmers to
transport
and market
milk,
generating
jobs and
income and
cutting
Haiti's £20m
annual milk
import bill.
President
René Préval
has hailed
the scheme
as a model
but Michel
Chancy, a
driving
force of
Veterimed, a
non-governmental
organisation
which backs
the dairies,
was wary.
"For 20
years
politicians
have been
talking
about
reviving
agriculture
but didn't
actually do
anything. If
this food
crisis
forces them
to act then
it is a big
opportunity."
That was a
big if, he
said.
Walk along a
beach in the
morning and
you find
Haitians
gazing at
the azure
ocean
horizon,
dreaming of
escape. They
are fiercely
proud of
their
history in
overthrowing
slavery and
colonialism
but these
days the US,
the Bahamas,
the
Dominican
Republic -
anywhere but
home - seems
the best
option.
The only
thing
stopping an
exodus are
US
coastguard
patrols,
said Herman
Janvier, 30,
a fishermen
on Cap
Haitian, a
smuggling
point.
"People want
out of here.
It's like
we're almost
dead
people."
The last
time Janvier
tried to
flee he was
intercepted
and interned
at
Guantánamo
Bay. "I
offered to
join the
American
army. I
offered to
clean their
base. They
said no. So
I am back
here, on a
boat with no
motor, doing
what I can
to survive."
See also:
Hunger in Haiti - David Levene on the struggle of ordinary Haitians to feed themselves
