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Originally published Friday, March 22, 2013 at 8:36 AM

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Haiti president seeks UN funds to rebuild country

Haiti President Michel Martelly has urged the United Nations to divert some of the billions of dollars it spends yearly on peacekeeping efforts to infrastructure projects, job creation and poverty alleviation.

The Associated Press

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GEORGETOWN, Guyana —

Haiti President Michel Martelly has urged the United Nations to divert some of the billions of dollars it spends yearly on peacekeeping efforts to infrastructure projects, job creation and poverty alleviation.

Officials need to think about sustainable development instead of security in the impoverished country that is still recovering from a devastating earthquake in 2010, Martelly said late Thursday while visiting Caricom's headquarters in Guyana as the Caribbean trade bloc's current chairman.

"Real insecurity will prevail when you have people who are looking for jobs, people who are looking for food," he said. "Contrary to what is being said Haiti, is not insecure. We need to think more about sustainable development than security."

Martelly said the economic boom that Haiti needs should come from developing the country's human resources instead of relying on donations or handouts.

"It is not about aid, but about trade," he said.

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