Canada's Disaster Assistance Response Team will be focusing its efforts on the hard-hit town of Jacmel, just outside Haiti's capital city, the commander of Canadian forces in the country said Monday.
Brig. Gen. Guy Laroche said the DART is well-suited to have a significant impact in the town, which is some 35 kilometres outside of Port-au-Prince and relatively tiny, compared to the millions who live in the shattered capital.
"We could have gone to many places; Jacmel is one of the places that is required for us to go," Laroche told a news conference on the balcony at the Canadian Embassy.
"There has been damage there ... DART is well equipped to make a difference and to help the people in Jacmel. It could have been any other place."
Laroche and Gilles Rivard, Canada's ambassador to Haiti, both agreed Jacmel - home to some 40,000 people and also the hometown of Gov. Gen. Michaelle Jean - is also a top priority for the Haitian government.
Dan Dugas, a spokesman for Defence Minister Peter MacKay, said the governor general had no hand in the decision to concentrate efforts on Jacmel.
"The decision where to establish the Canadian area of operations is made by the Canadian Forces chain of command, based on the recommendation of the brigadier general on the ground," Dugas said from Ottawa.
"The governor general is not involved in the decision."
Jacmel, which is also where one of two Canadian warships is headed, is "cut off from the world" and deserves to be a priority for the relief effort - especially considering it is also a stated priority for the Haitian government itself....