Restoring Haiti’s Farmland More than 4,000 hectares of productive farmland are back in production.-Added COMMENTARY By Haitian-Truth

Engineer Denis explaining completed works to Mr. Jean Robert Estimé, WINNER COP, Mr. Vernet Joseph, Secretary of State to agriculture renewal and to Mr. Herbert Smith, USAID Acting Director.

Photo: U.S. Embassy Haiti
Engineer Denis explaining completed works to Mr. Jean Robert Estimé, WINNER COP, Mr. Vernet Joseph, Secretary of State to agriculture renewal and to Mr. Herbert Smith, USAID Acting Director.

More than 4,000 hectares of productive farmland are back in production in Haiti with the assistance of the United States Government’s global hunger and food security initiative, Feed the Future.

Ceremonies inaugurating the re-opening of the rehabilitated Riviere Blanche irrigation system were held August 7th in the outskirts of the rural town of Ganthier. Mr. Vernet Joseph, U.S. Secretary of State for Agriculture Renewal and Mr. Herbert Smith, U.S. Agency for International Development [USAID] Acting Mission Director, were among the participants in this milestone event for Haitian agriculture.

Built in the 1920s, the Rivière Blanche irrigation system lacked proper maintenance and previously operated at only ten percent of its capacity. Working in partnership with Haiti’s Ministry of Agriculture, Feed the Future investments have helped the system return to one-hundred percent productive capacity, to the benefit of local farmers.

In 2011, the U.S. government worked with the Ministry of Agriculture, the mayor and Ganthier area farmers to rehabilitate the left bank and right bank irrigation system. As a result of this work, farmers are now able to utilize the land for agricultural production, improving living conditions for farmers in the Cul-de-Sac corridor.

Feed the Future, the platform that coordinates U.S. Government for agriculture and nutrition efforts in developing countries, is working with Haitian authorities to raise smallholders’ incomes by modernizing agriculture in rural areas. Through agricultural intensification, rehabilitation of rural infrastructure, and better management of natural resources, Feed the Future aims at improving the livelihoods and increase nutrition of smallholder farmers and their families.

The United States is proud to work with the government of Haiti and other public and private sector partners to help restore, maintain and develop the country’s natural resources for the benefit of the people of Haiti.

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COMMENT: HAITIAN-TRUTH.ORG
Good news.

Unfortunately, we cannot reclaim the hundreds of acres of key, fertile farmland that Clinton’s industrial park has destroyed. This Clinton park has also destroyed something else, the jobs of thousands who have worked in the Port-au-Prince area…. with companies that will now transfer operations to the new site with its promised slave force, working for $5.00US per day.

The Korean entrepreneur benefiting from the new industrial park has a terrible labor relations record. He has been thrown out of two or three countries for cause.

Clinton obviously did little research into this criminal’s background.

I’m sure that other people could have been found, who would do something for the Haitian workers, and their families, while befitting from Haiti’s proximity to American markets.

Farmers were dispossessed of their 500 acres.

Haitians, working at the new facility, will really be in a sweat shop environment.

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