Haiti, one year later: Why has rebuilding been so slow?

On the anniversary of Haiti's deadly Jan. 12, 2010 earthquake, the recovery is only beginning

Haitians pray together on the one-year anniversary of the massive earthquake that rocked Port-au-Prince.
(Image credit: Getty)

The normally bustling streets of Haiti's capital fell silent on Wednesday, as Haitians stopped to commemorate the anniversary of last year's devastating 7.0-magnitude earthquake, which, according to new government estimates, killed more than 316,000 people. There has been some progress — about 690,000 of those citizens whose homes were destroyed have been moved into new housing. But at least 810,000 remain in the hundreds of tent cities that appeared in the disaster's aftermath, and much of the billions in promised foreign aid has yet to arrive. (Watch a New York Times report about Haiti's recovery.) Why has rebuilding been so slow? Here, three theories:

No one has picked up the rubble: Walk through the capital, Port-au-Prince, and the reason Haiti has yet to truly begin to "reinvent itself" is plain, says Tim Padgett in Time. Only 5 percent of the heavy debris left by the quake has been hauled away. "Nothing can really be done," says Leslie Voltaire, an urban architect and presidential candidate, "until the rubble is removed."

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