The massive earthquake of January 2010 in Haiti is estimated to have left more than 200,000 people dead and 1.5 million homeless. The most affected cities are Port-au-Prince, Leogane, Petit Goave and Jacmel, which are characterized by widespread destruction of infrastructure and disruption of even the basic services, such as shelters, electricity, water, transport and health and security services.
Women have been particularly affected by the disaster. Several indicators allow the assumption that approximately two-thirds of those killed were women, due to their poor housing conditions. Huge loss of jobs, capital and economic resources have also resulted from the devastating earthquake. In times of natural disasters, women and girls are also at heightened risk of violence, in particular sexual violence, because of the lack of shelter and security. Today, six months after the disaster, as large populations continue to live in squalid temporary shelters built of sheets, the threat of violence is constant. Women have to share latrines without lights; they must bathe in public; and they are forced to sleep next to strangers after losing contact with family members.
FACTS AND FIGURES
Women represent 52 percent of the Haitian population and play a key role in ensuring the survival of their families. Even before the earthquake, decades of political instability, pervasive poverty and gender inequities had taken a heavy toll on the rights and security of women. There is a high prevalence of domestic and sexual violence in the country:
Women of Haiti also carry the disproportionate burden of care for children and other family dependents:
Most women are employed in the informal sector and earn less than half of what men earn:
Rigid gender roles and inequalities in the Caribbean island often prevent women from being included in political decision-making and increase their vulnerability to high levels of gender-based violence:
(Date: July 2010)