U.N Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, left, listens to US
actor Sean Penn during his visit to a makeshift camp for
earthquake survivors set up at the Petionville Golf Club in
Port-au-Prince, Sunday, March 14, 2010. Photo by AP.
Look closely at the foreigners buzzing around a hospital
tent above one of Haiti's biggest earthquake-refugee camps and
a face stands out: There, carrying the box of supplies, that's
Sean Penn.
Now he's guiding a Haitian girl to waiting doctors. Now he's
lobbying the chief of U.N. peacekeeping operations to provide
better security for the camp's 45,000 people. And now he's
talking to the press.
"These people are going to have nowhere to go, by and large,
in the rainy season," the Oscar-winning actor told The
Associated Press. "The efforts that we've seen ... have been
extraordinary - down the line. But this is an impossible kind
of situation."
The 49-year-old actor came to Haiti about a week after the
January 12 quake killed a government-estimated 230,000 people
and made 1.3 million homeless. He's left just a a few times
since - mostly for Haiti-related meetings, he said, and to
present the Oscar for best actress - and doesn't plan to
leave again until mid-April.
His blue-shirted workers with the newly formed Jenkins-Penn
Haiti Relief Organization provide medical care, water filters
and food. On Sunday, they opened a health clinic for mothers
and victims of a growing sexual assault epidemic.
"As long as this camp is here, we'll stay here. When this
camp's not here anymore then we'll have to be where we are
accessible to people," Penn said.
The ridge where the group is based is a short but taxing walk
uphill from an increasingly fetid sprawl of makeshift
tarp-and-tent homes. Thousands of families came to the valley
golf course in the days after the quake, following the U.S.
Army's 82nd Airborne Division and its food distributions onto
the steep country club grounds.
The group got a major boost Sunday in a visit by U.N.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. He toured the facilities with
Penn and actress-turned-aid worker Maria Bello - best known
among the thinning crowd of U.S. soldiers for her turn in
Coyote Ugly.
Penn had never been to Haiti before - "It was just, you know,
I saw ten minutes of news and we started organising," he
said. - but after two months he talks like a veteran
volunteer.
"I don't think that anybody who hasn't been in places like
this really understands what poverty is, and what a real lack
of infrastructure is," he said.
But he speaks more freely than most aid workers do, decrying
disaster profiteers and corrupt local officials who siphon
aid, calling for more floored tents to help families at risk
for disease and floods, and warning that recent outbursts of
violence in the camp could be signs of rising tension.
When a Haitian reporter walks up and asks him about his
personal accomplishments in Haiti, the actor cringes.
"What have I been doing? Well, I've spent the last 20 minutes
talking to you."
He turns around, and goes back to work.
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