On Jun. 19, model Petra
Nemcova’s Happy Hearts Fund will honor Haitian
President Michel Martelly and former U.S.
President Bill Clinton at a star-studded
fundraiser
at a Cipriani chain restaurant on 42nd
Street in Manhattan.
But Haitian
community groups and their supporters in New
York are planning to demonstrate outside the
event to call attention to Mr. Martelly’s
corruption and repression, and Mr. Clinton’s
responsibility for the largely bungled
international relief effort which he headed
after Haiti’s Jan. 12, 2010 earthquake.
The Happy
Hearts Fund, which was created 10 years ago by
Ms. Nemcova after she survived the Indian Ocean
tsunami, will give Martelly a “Leadership in
Education Award” for “his transformational
leadership after the devastating earthquake and
commitment to uplifting the country’s future
through education,” the HHR explains on its
website.
Mr. Clinton
will receive a “Lifetime Achievement Award” for
“his leadership and life-saving work ensuring
that children and communities are not forgotten
after disasters strike.”
Ms. Nemcova is
the girlfriend of Martelly’s Prime Minister and
longtime business partner Laurent Lamothe, who
will also reportedly attend the event.
“Already this
month, there have been two massive
demonstrations in Port-au-Prince demanding that
Martelly and Lamothe resign for looting state
coffers and jailing critics,” said Ray Laforest
of the International Support Haiti Network (ISHN),
one of the groups sponsoring the protest outside
Cipriani. “Teachers are striking and students
are marching to denounce how the Martelly
government is strangling education in Haiti. Now
the clueless glitterati are going to toast him
for supposedly promoting education. It’s an
outrage and a disgrace.”
This is not the
first time that Ms. Nemcova’s charity has been
criticized. “After surviving the 2004 tsunami in
Thailand by clinging to the top of a palm tree,
the supermodel wanted to pay it forward by
founding a charity to build schools in Latin
America and Indonesia,”
reported the New
York Post on Nov. 9, 2008.
“Instead, it seems an outrageous portion of the
donations have gone for lavish parties at
Cipriani. Bruce Willis, Uma Thurman and Eva
Mendes have attended the black-tie affairs.
According to the most recent tax filing, for
2006, the organization spent more than half of
its funds on administration and fund raising,
including its annual star-studded Heart of Gold
ball, and gave nothing in aid. Glen Nordlinger,
a director of Happy Hearts Fund, said the group
raised $4.5 million in 2007 and spent $2.1
million on programs, including building
schools... But even those figures raise red
flags with charity watchdog groups, which use
the almost universal standard that a well-run
charity should spend 65 to 75 percent of its
donations helping people.”
Mr. Clinton has
been roundly criticized for his leadership as
co-chairman of the Interim Haiti Recovery
Commission (IHRC), which coordinated
disbursement of billions of dollars contributed
to Haiti after the earthquake.
“Four years
after a magnitude 7.0 earthquake toppled the
capital city of Port-au-Prince and heavily
damaged other parts of the country, hundreds of
millions of dollars from the State Department's
U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID),
allocated to the IHRC, are gone,” wrote Mary
O’Grady in a
May 18 column
in the Wall Street Journal. “Hundreds of
millions more to the IHRC from international
donors have also been spent. Left behind is a
mishmash of low quality, poorly thought-out
development experiments and half-finished
projects.”
As a result,
“Haitians are angry, frustrated and increasingly
suspicious of the motives of the IHRC and of its
top official, Mr. Clinton. Americans might feel
the same way if they knew more about this
colossal failure. One former Haitian official
puts it this way: ‘I really cannot understand
how you could raise so much money, put a former
U.S. president in charge, and get this
outcome.’”
Four years
after the quake, “more than 170,000 people are
estimated to still be living in more than 300
displacement camps, in the majority of cases in
appalling conditions with no access to essential
basic services such as clean water, toilets and
waste disposal,” wrote Amnesty International in
a Jan. 9, 2014
statement.
Demonstrators
will gather on Thursday at 5 p.m. in front of
Cipriani, which is at 110 East 42nd Street in
Manhattan, between Lexington and Park Avenues.
Also being
honored at the event are United Airlines CEO
Jeff Smisek and philanthropist John Caudwell.
“Under Martelly, demonstrations in
Haiti are almost always broken up with the
police firing teargas into the crowd and beating
people,” said Henriot Dorcent, a leader of the
Dessalines Coordination (KOD), a new Haitian
party which is also supporting the demonstration
outside Cipriani. “Martelly won’t be able to do
that in New York. He has enriched himself and
his cronies from the Haitian treasury and
PetroCaribe account, while Clinton has
monopolized, squandered, and misdirected Haiti’s
precious earthquake funds. Haitians in New York
won’t allow those two men who have so damaged
Haiti’s present and future to be honored without
people knowing the truth.”
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