"We are here so that (interim president) Jocelerme Privert finally takes the victims' side during the UN General Assembly next week," said Mario Joseph, a lawyer representing several people who contracted the disease.
In mid-August, nearly six years after the epidemic first spread in this impoverished island nation, the United Nations recognised that it had a "moral responsibility" toward the victims and promised material aid.
"The United Nations is finally recognising it brought cholera here, so it's time for the Haitian authorities to say something," Joseph said yesterday.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has recommended a six- month renewal of MINUSTAH, which was established in 2004.
Haitians fiercely opposed to the presence of the peacekeepers spoke of an international plot.
"Whenever the time comes to decide on whether to renew the mission, there is more insecurity in the city," said Martine Febert.
The UN peacekeepers "favor this insecurity in order to justify their presence and keep their jobs," said the 23-year- old.
Nearly 10,000 people have died from cholera in Haiti. With more than 500 cases of the disease each week, the country is facing the worst epidemic in the world in recent history.
Some 72 per cent of Haitians have no toilets at home and 42 per cent still lack access to drinking water, the UN says.
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