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Showing posts with label earthquake relief. Show all posts
Showing posts with label earthquake relief. Show all posts

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Chile Needs Our Help, Our Thoughts, Our Prayers

COPIED from USA Today. (Chile earthquake: How you can help and stay safe from tsunamis)


Several international disaster relief organizations have already begun mobilizing resources for the earthquake-stricken region. Here are a few that have already launched campaigns for Chile:


AmeriCares is sending medical supplies and humanitarian aid to Chile. Go here to make a donation to support these efforts.

The American Red Cross has already pledged $50,000 in aid for Chile and tsunami preparedness. You can make a donation through the American Red Cross' International Response Fund, and it will be allocated specifically for Chile relief efforts.

Habitat for Humanity is also seeking donations for Chile rebuilding efforts;
The Salvation Army is also sending personnel and supplies to assist in the relief effort and is in need of donations.

Samaritan's Purse, the international aid and development group headed by Rev. Franklin Graham, is working to help.

Save The Children is sending an emergency assessment team to Chile and is asking for donations to its Children's Emergency Fund to aid these efforts.

World Vision, a Christian humanitarian charity organization, is also working to help children and families devastated by the quake. To learn more about its efforts and to donate, visit itsr website.

Texting to help
Text CHILE to 25383 to donate $10 to Habitat for Humanity
To follow relief efforts and opportunities for aid, you can also follow the Red Cross on Twitter.

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Haiti Was Hungry Before the Quake

Even before the big quake, Haiti was in dire straits.  It is the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere.  Haiti's GDP (PPP) per capita is about $800 with most people living on less than $2 per day, compared to the United States' GDP of nearly $47,000.  There is a shortage of skilled workers, 66% of its workforce are engaged in agriculture, and 2/3 of the people are unemployed.  If that is not tragic enough, 80% of the people live below the poverty line.  Half of this island nation's children do not receive vaccinations and 60% of the population do not have access to basic health care.  Additionally, Haiti has a literacy rate of only 50%.  It appears to be a nearly hopeless situation.

Who are the hardest hit by this level of poverty?  The children.  Not only are half of the children unvaccinated, but also nearly 50% of Haiti's children die before the age of fifteen.  Many children endure homelessness, hunger, and abuse.  Children have become so hungry that they have resorted to eating "mud pies", a mixture of mud and oil baked in the sun. Anything not to feel the pain and suffering starvation.  It is estimated that 44 children die HOURLY in Haiti.  That was BEFORE the earthquake.

Now imagine on top of all of this poverty and suffering, the insufficient level infrastructure that existed has now been nearly annihilated after a 7.0 earthquake and a 6.0 aftershock.  The outcome is dismal.  No, impossible.  Unless you and I do something to help these people and their children.



"The current situation in Haiti is dire. With the price of basic food staples in Haiti rising 40--50% in the past year, hunger continues to grow and the people are growing increasingly desperate. At Food For The Poor's main feeding center in Port-au-Prince, approximately 15,000 people are fed six days a week--and it's still not enough.


Presently, an estimated 80% Haitians live in abject poverty. The spike in food prices threatens to make things worse. In recent days, the desperation has given way to violence and rioting. Thousands are taking to the streets protesting the crisis.


You have the power to help; the power to change the life. A gift of only $12 can feed a family for a month. Please help:  http://www.foodforthepoor.org/. "

Sources of information: CIA Factbook, Wikipedia, & http://www.chrf.org/haiti.html

Monday, January 25, 2010

Haiti Seeks to Shape Its Own Future...But It Needs Help

This is an article found from the The Hindu (http://beta.thehindu.com/news/international/article94936.ece)

Haiti wants to shape its future; needs more aid, tents
Haiti’s prime minister put forward a strong case Monday to the international community for more aid, but made clear that Haiti wants to guide the process and develop its own vision of rebuilding the shattered capital Port-au-Prince and outlying areas.


Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive spoke to foreign ministers from 20 nations in Montreal, where Canada called for participants to consider forgiveness of the Caribbean country’s nearly 1-billion-dollars in foreign debt.

The Haitian government “is working under precarious conditions but it is in a position to assume the leadership role expected by its people in order to launch the country on its path to reconstruction,” Bellerive told delegates.

Before the conference opened, he said he was not in Montreal to “simply ask for help.” “We have a plan,” he said, that calls for the future to be “clearly delineated by the Haitians for the Haitians using democratic means.” The conference paved the way for a donors’ conference in March where monetary pledges are expected. Venezuela, Nicaragua and Bolivia boycotted the conference to protest the presence of 20,000 US military personnel in an aid capacity in Haiti.

In Brussels, European Union foreign ministers agreed to send at least 300 police officers to Haiti to boost the United Nations’ stabilization mission (MINUSTAH). Japan was also considering dispatching more troops. The UN mission, which was seriously damaged by the January 12 mammoth earthquake, has confirmed 82 staffers dead and another 53 missing.

Haitian President Rene Preval requested 200,000 tents before the spring rainy season arrives, the UN mission in Haiti said. As many as 800,000 Haitians need shelter. The government plans to build tent cities outside of Port-au-Prince to house many of the displaced.

Haitian rapper Wyclef Jean, who has helped spearhead fundraising efforts, supported the idea in an interview: “The cleaning will take long, that’s why I say: Start bringing the people out of the city with tents and start to convert the tents into homes.” The World Food Programme said Haiti would need more food — and for a much longer time than anticipated -- in what WFP executive director Josette Sheeran called “the most complex operation that WFP has ever faced.” Much of the food must be transported over bad roads from the neighbouring Dominican Republic on WFP’s 75 trucks.

At least 112,000 people are confirmed dead, and that number is expected to climb. An intense, almost daily series of aftershocks has brought more buildings tumbling and caused more injuries and deaths.

Bellerive called for Haitians living abroad to come home and help rebuild the country. “The catastrophe has escalated the emigration of Haitians. We need people to take courage and return,” he said.

In other developments: -- Taiwan President Ma Ying-jeou planned to fly with an aid delivery to Haiti’s neighbour, the Dominican Republic, just a short hop away from Honduras, where he had been planning to attend the presidential inauguration on Wednesday.

** A 21—member Philippine medical team was on its way to help address the growing urgency for wound and trauma treatment. The Haitian government estimates the number of injured at 194,000, many with mangled and crushed limbs.

** Private donations in Britain for earthquake relief reached 46 million pounds (74 million dollars), according to the umbrella aid group The Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC).

** The United Nations Human Rights Council plans to meet on Wednesday for a special session in Geneva on Haiti, to focus on a “human rights approach” to relief efforts.

** The United States plans to create 20,000 jobs by the end of the month in Haiti by hiring people to help with the cleanup, the US State Department’s coordinator for relief and reconstruction, Lewis Lucke, said. Hiring has already begun.

** The European Union said it would not launch a comprehensive plan to facilitate adoptions of child quake orphans. In Washington, the US State Department confirmed that the US has evacuated more than 360 Haitian orphans and expected another 200 children. It was working through adoption centres to resettle them.

The status of these US-bound children was not clear. In Haiti on the weekend, Information Minister Marie Laurence Joselin Lassegue said that the government has put a halt to new adoptions and would only allow children already in the midst of adoptions to leave.


A man leaves after retrieving some documents from the rubble of a collapsed building in the aftermath of a powerful earthquake on Jan. 12 in Port-au-Prince. Photo: AP