
Haiti’s President Michel Martelly (L), former U.S. president Bill Clinton (2nd L) and Haiti’s First Lady Sophia Martelly (2nd R) visit a memorial service remembering the lives lost in the January 2010 earthquake at the mass burial site at Morne St. Christophe January 12, 2013. Clinton flew to Haiti on Saturday to join the country’s president, Michel Martelly, at an official commemoration of the third anniversary of the earthquake. (Photo by Swoan Parker/Reuters)

File Photo: Former US president Bill Clinton (2L), who heads UN efforts to rebuild Haiti, tours the destroyed Haitian presidential palace, July 12 2010, in Port-au-Prince, on the six-month anniversary of the devastating January 12 earthquake. (Photo by Thony Belizaire/AFP/Getty Images/File)

File Photo: Former U.S. President Bill Clinton greets an injured woman at the Central Hospital January 18, 2010 in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. The Haitian capital continues to struggle with the effects of a devastating earthquake. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images/File)

File Photo: The former president of the United States, Bill Clinton, takes bottles of water out of his plane, January 18, 2010 at the international airport of Port-au-Prince. (Photo by Olivier Laban mattei/AFP/Getty Images/File)

File Photo: Former US president Bill Clinton (C), the UN special envoy to Haiti, performs the groundbreaking during inaugural ceremonies for an industrial park on November 28 2011 in Cap-Haitian (300 Km north of Port-au-Prince). (Photo by Thony BELIZAIRE /AFP/Getty Images/File)

File Photo: Former US president Bill Clinton (L), who heads UN efforts to rebuild Haiti, shakes hands with the reconstruction workers at the destroyed Haitian presidential palace, July 12 2010 in Port-au-Prince, on the six-month anniversary of the devastating January 12 earthquake which measured 7.0 in magnitude. (Photo by Thony Belizaire/AFP/Getty Images/File)

File Photo: Former US president and UN Special Envoy for Haiti Bill Clinton(C) greets local residents on October 6, 2010 in a city camp in Port-au-Prince. The Clinton Foundation announced that it will, through its Haiti Relief Fund – provide 500,000 USD in bridge funding for a camp in Petionville run by the J/P Haitian Relief Organization. “Rebuilding housing for more than 1 million people displaced by the earthquake will take time, as teams on the ground continue to clear rubble and build infrastructure, including water and sanitation systems,” President Clinton said. (Photo by Thony Belizaire/AFP/Getty Images/File)

File Photo: Former U.S. President Bill Clinton speaks at the ribbon cutting ceremony for the Iron Market on January 11, 2011 in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. The market was built in the 1890′s, destroyed by fire in 2010 and reconstructed this year. (Photo by Allison Shelley/Getty Images/File)

File Photo: Then Haiti President Rene Preval and former President Bill Clinton embrace during the annual Clinton Global Initiative (CGI) September 23, 2010 in New York . The sixth annual meeting of the CGI gathers prominent individuals in politics, business, science, academics, religion and entertainment to discuss global issues such as climate change and the reconstruction of Haiti. (Photo by Timothy A. Clary/AFP/Getty Images/File)

File Photo: Former US president Bill Clinton visits students at a school in Port-au-Prince where he announced the launch of a new Clinton Foundation effort in Haiti, the National Cholera Education and Awareness Campaign, “Lavi san Kolera,” (“Life Without Cholera”) on April 8, 2011. (Photo by Thony Belizaire/AFP/Getty Images/File)

File Photo: Former US president Bill Clinton (C, R) and his wife, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (C, L), pose with workers at the grand opening cermony of the new Caracol Industrial Park in Caracol, Haiti, on October 22, 2012. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton hailed Haitian reconstruction after the devastating 2010 earthquake, drawing parallels between the “American dream” and the “Haitian dream.” Clinton was speaking at the formal opening of an industrial zone meant to help boost economic development and create 37,000 jobs in the impoverished country still reeling from the quake, which killed at least 250,000 people. (Photo by Larry Downing/AFP/Getty Images/File)

(L-R) Haitian Prime Minister Laurent Lamorthe, Haitian President Michel Martelly, UN special envoy to Haiti former US president Bill Clinton and Haitian First Lady Sophia Martelly observe a minute of silence on January 12, 2013 in Titanyin, 14km from Port-au-Prince, at a communal grave for a memorial ceremony in honor of the victims of the January 12, 2010 earthquake in Haiti. Three years after a massive earthquake ravaged Haiti, Martelly said the country was slowly rebuilding, despite the ongoing day-to-day misery of many survivors. Hundreds of thousands are still living rough in squalid makeshift camps, and they now face rampant crime, a cholera outbreak and the occasional hurricane. (Photo by Thony Belizaire/AFP/Getty Images)