INTERVIEW-Haiti PM says cholera outbreak under control

* Haiti PM didn't discuss cholera epidemic with UN chief

* Haiti focus on getting aid promised but not delivered

* Haiti wants any UN withdrawal linked to police capacity

UNITED NATIONS, Sept 26 (Reuters) - A cholera epidemic in

Haiti that has killed thousands and been blamed on U.N.

peacekeepers was "regrettable" but has been brought under

control, the prime minister of the poor Caribbean nation said at

the United Nations on Wednesday.

Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe met U.N. Secretary-General

Ban Ki-moon on Wednesday, but he told Reuters they did not

discuss accusations by some Haitians that Nepalese peacekeepers

sparked the epidemic after camp latrines contaminated a river.

"This (the outbreak) is regrettable," Lamothe, who became

prime minister in May, said during an interview on the sidelines

of the U.N. General Assembly.

"Our duty is to take care of the people and to solve the

problem and that's where we have been focusing our attention,

while the U.N. is investigating the causes."

An independent panel appointed by Ban to study the epidemic

issued a May 2011 report that the United Nations said did not

determine conclusively how cholera was introduced into Haiti.

But the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in

June 2011 found that evidence strongly suggested U.N.

peacekeepers from Nepal were the source.

Lamothe said he and Ban "didn't discuss the cause, we

discussed the treatment and going forward."

The cholera outbreak has sickened almost 600,000 people and

killed more than 7,400 in Haiti since October 2010. Cholera is

an infection that causes severe diarrhea and can lead to

dehydration and death. It occurs in places with poor sanitation

and can be treated by drinking clean fluids.

In a report to the U.N. Security Council last month, Ban

said there had been an increase in the number of cholera cases

since the rainy season began in early March and the World Health

Organization projects up to 112,000 cases during 2012.

But Lamothe said the outbreak was "really under control" and

said that the United Nations mission in Haiti, which began in

2004, had only helped the country and the government was

"eternally grateful" for the world body's help.

"We like to think on the positive side, we are the eternal

optimists," he said. "You need that in Haiti to run a country

that's been mismanaged for the past 30 years. You need a lot of

optimism and a lot of will to do the right thing."

STILL STRUGGLING

Haiti is still struggling to lift itself from the rubble

left by an earthquake in January 2010 that killed about 300,000

people and left more than 1.5 million homeless. Lamothe said 1.2

million of those had been moved back into homes, while the

United Nations said 390,000 were still living in tent camps.

Only half the $5.5 billion pledged by the international

community at a 2010 fundraising conference has been delivered.

"We are working at remobilizing, re-energizing the donor

community at least to fulfill the commitment they had made,"

Lamothe said. "Haiti's destruction was estimated at $12.5

billion, out of which right now we received a fraction of that."

"We want it to go through the Haitian government. The

Haitian government will allocate it and work together with the

different communities on the ground," he said.

Lamothe said 54 percent of Haitians were living in extreme

poverty on less than $1 a day and during the next year he hope

to reduce that to 40 percent. He said that while some aid groups

were withdrawing he was not concerned Haiti was being forgotten.

"Usually a country is forgotten when things are doing

better, so we like to think things are doing better," he said.

A U.N. peacekeeping force in Haiti was recently extended for

another year, but the number of authorized troops and police

will be reduced by about 1,700 to 8,800 by June 2013.

U.N. peacekeepers - who helped maintain security, especially

during elections plagued by fraud and unrest - are gradually

handing over responsibility to the Haitian National Police.

"We want our police to be up to par and when that happens in

three or four years, then we will be ready," Lamothe said.

(Editing by Doina Chiacu)