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16283: (Hermantin) Miami-Herald-Forest land in Haiti fading fast (fwd)



From: leonie hermantin <lhermantin@hotmail.com>

Posted on Tue, Aug. 05, 2003

Forest land in Haiti fading fast
NATURAL RESOURCE NUDGED TO THE BRINK
BY JANE REGAN
Special to The Herald


SEGUIN, Haiti -- Desperate to survive, Haitians are slowly gnawing away at
their last one percent of forest, turning trees in state preserves into
lumber, firewood and charcoal and burning the grounds to plant vegetable
patches.

Government officials meanwhile squabble over the proper policy to protect
what little is left, and park rangers complain they are too few to halt the
forests' destruction -- even as trucks loaded with charcoal pass their
checkpoints.

It's enough to make 12-year-old Wilfred Exantus angry as he recently watched
a fire set by a neighbor so that he could push his illegal vegetable garden
deeper into the La Visite Park.

''They do it because they need money,'' Exantus said, a simple but brutal
reality in a country where the average person survives on less than $1 a
day.

Most of the remaining trees in Haiti, about 75 percent forested before
Europeans arrived in 1492, are located in two parks and one forest reserve,
including the La Visite Park and nearby Pine Forest Reserve, which together
cover 77,000 acres high in the La Selle mountain range south of
Port-au-Prince. The third park, Pic Macaya, sits on 13,500 acres in
mountains to the southwest.

The parks were created by former dictator Jean-Claude Duvalier in 1983. But
even his feared regime didn't stop the cutting.

Almost 20 years of political turbulence only compounded the problem, with
the economy faltering and poverty growing. This year, the country dropped on
the U.N. Human Development Index ranking, from 146th to 150th among 175
nations.

EFFORTS FALTER

Efforts to save Haiti's forests have met with little success over the years.

Among them was a $22.5 million World Bank project, its first environmental
loan to the devastated country. Haitian Minister of Environment Webster
Pierre suspended the project soon after taking office in 2001. ''It wasn't
my vision,'' he explained.

But before his ministry could decide what to do, the World Bank canceled the
project altogether. A bank report last year said ''there is no evidence that
[the project] slowed the pace of degradation of natural resources'' and
deplored high ministerial turnover, lack of commitment and inter-agency
squabbling.

''The government wasn't particularly committed,'' said the bank's Elizabeth
Monosowski, who was the project's manager, in a telephone interview from
Washington, D.C.

Four decades after the forest preserves' creation, no centralized agency has
been established to run them. Today four Haitian ministries -- agriculture,
tourism, environment and planning -- argue over how they should be run.

A 1998 French Spot XS satellite study put Haiti's forest cover at only 1.25
percent, and at last year's Earth Summit, President Jean-Bertrand Aristide
said that number had dropped to 1 percent.

ECOSYSTEMS IN DANGER

Meanwhile, deforestation in Haiti -- described by one recent U.N. report as
''one of the most degraded countries in the world'' -- also threatens its
mountain ecosystems.

The La Selle range is home to a number of birds and plants that do not exist
anywhere else. A survey three years ago found that many native birds,
including the Hispaniolan Parrot and Parakeet, Chat Tanager and White-Winged
Warbler, were in danger of disappearing.

''They are unique to the world and contribute to a long evolutionary history
of the Caribbean,'' said Florence Sergile, co-author of several studies on
Haiti's flora and fauna.

If the cutting continues, many endemic species will become extinct, Sergile
said in an e-mail from her home in Gainesville.

Sergile also said Haiti's tree ''gene pool'' has already been seriously
eroded because so many healthy ones have been cut, leaving mostly smaller,
weaker ones to reproduce.

The cutting is also threatening one of the country's last forested
watersheds, since La Visite Park's wooded peaks capture precious raindrops
for Haiti's capital as well as major agricultural areas north and south of
the range.

On a recent afternoon at the Pine Forest Reserve, a steady stream of
peasants carried freshly harvested potatoes, carrots and cabbages out of the
forest, walking past rows of trees whose trunks were blackened.

Wilner Jean, 52, and two other agents played cards at the gate house,
getting up occasionally to check passing trucks for illegal shipments of cut
trees.

''There are only six of us, two teams of three. We are supposed to man this
post and also cover the terrain,'' about half the reserve, or almost 40,000
acres, he said.

``What that means in reality is that there are no guards in the forest.
Zero. People can cut wood. People can plant cabbage. People can do whatever
they want.''

Over the course of two hours, six trucks piled high with charcoal -- made
from trees -- rumbled out of the park. The agents made a cursory search for
planks but hardly glanced at the sacks, saying the charcoal could have been
made outside the reserve limits.

PROTECTION PLAN

Minister of the Environment Pierre said he disagrees with a ''billy-club''
method of protecting the parks. Instead, he wants peasants living in the
forests to continue to live there, growing vegetables and looking after
trees in exchange for $1.20 per tree per year. He said so far the rest of
the government hasn't bought into his idea.

''I put the plan on the Internet; I've talked about it on the radio. That's
all I can do,'' he said, throwing up his hands.

Now he is looking to the Haitian diaspora. ``All I ask is one dollar per
person per year. No more.''

In the meantime, Pierre is proud of a new cadre of 1,045 paid
''environmental agents'' who are intended to educate the population about
the value of Haiti's forests.

But Jacmel chemistry professor Wesner Jean, who coordinates agents in his
region, including La Visite Park, admitted that without police backup, the
agents, armed only with leaflets and posters and paid about $60 per month,
can't stop tree-cutters.

Ronel Ceran, a consultant currently with the United Nations who worked for
the Environment Ministry when it was first established in the 1990s,
dismissed the agents' effectiveness.

More money, more agents and more microprojects are not the answer, Ceran
said. ''As long as the political crisis isn't resolved . . . the level of
corruption in this country is so high that nothing is possible in terms of
long-term effect,'' he said.

In Port-au-Prince, thousands of sacks of charcoal and kindling and scores of
trucks piled high with pine, avocado, mango and apricot wood for building,
cooking and dry-cleaning clog the markets.

Wesner Pierre-Louis, 46, supports his family by selling pine planks. He said
he knows deforestation damages the environment.

''But if the government doesn't want wood to be cut, it should stop the
peasants,'' he said. ``If a peasant brings me wood, I'll sell it.''

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