Haiti Quake Updates

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Save the Children to Distribute Food Rations to 200,000 Children and Families in Haiti

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Wendy Christian
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Save the Children to Distribute Food Rations to 200,000 Children and Families in Haiti in Partnership with World Food Program

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (Jan. 29, 2010) — Save the Children will partner with the World Food Program (WFP) to distribute critically needed food supplies to about 200,000 children and families in Haiti affected by the catastrophic earthquake over two weeks ago.   

Beginning this Sunday, Save the Children will provide family food rations – enough to feed a family for two weeks – to about 33,000 families (equivalent to 200,000 people) with special attention to women.

 

Food distribution in Haiti. Photo credit: Colin Crowley. 

"Two weeks after the disaster, many families are still without a stable food supply," warned Annie Foster, Save the Children's emergency team leader in Haiti. "Rapid food distribution must begin immediately to save the most vulnerable, especially children."

"Children are the first ones to suffer," said Foster. "While some local markets have reopened, there are only small supplies of food and the prices have risen dramatically."

Save the Children is one of several aid agencies who will assist in a two-week WFP distribution program in and around the city of Port-au-Prince.

U.S. Military to Provide Security During Food Distribution, World Food Program to Transport Food to Sites

The US military will provide security during the food distribution and ensure the boundaries of site areas are properly arranged prior to distribution. WFP is responsible for the secure transportation of the food to the distribution site areas.

"Haitian people keep hearing that food is coming," said Foster. "But many of them have not seen any. They are becoming increasingly impatient.

One of the measures Save the Children took to prevent possible incidents is to get the community involved in the process, so they understand how this distribution will take place."

Several Additional Partners to Help Manage Distribution Sites

Save the Children is working closely with World Vision, Catholic Relief Services and Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA) to manage the multiple WFP distribution sites.

Since the earthquake, Save the Children's health teams have reached more than 85,000 people with medical treatment.  The aid agency is also distributing hygiene and household supplies such as soap, towels, cans to hold water, and plastic sheeting for shelter. 

Save the Children has worked in Haiti since 1978 and currently has about 250 staff in the country.

Learn more about our emergency response to the earthquake in Haiti.

Please Help Us Respond to the Haiti Emergency by Donating Now

Donate any amount at www.savethechildren.org or by calling 1-800-728-3843 or 1-203-221-4030.

OR DONATE $10 BY TEXTING "SAVE" to 20222 (U.S. Only). Standard message rates apply.

Save the Children is the leading, independent organization that creates lasting change for children in need in the United States and around the world. Save the Children USA is a member of the International Save the Children Alliance, a global network of 29 independent Save the Children organizations working to ensure the well-being and protection of children in more than 120 countries. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

Filed under  //   HelpHaiti   aid   catholic relief services   english   food   haiti   press release   save the children   wfp  
Posted by Jason Wojo 

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Answers About New York’s Response to Haiti’s Earthquake | City Room Blog - NYTimes.com

Following is the first set of responses from Elsie St. Louis-Accilien, the executive director of Haitian-Americans United for Progress.

Thank you for taking the time to put me to the test with very thoughtful questions, some of which may even be beyond my pay grade. As the executive director of the Haitian-Americans United for Progress, I normally deal with issues of domestic import, in particular those that relate to the health and welfare of the residents of the greater Cambria Heights community in Queens. Yet the catastrophic earthquake that devastated a third of my native land has forced us all to provide a most humane response while not forgetting the tough questions.

I will respond to the questions in no particular order, but I hope that though I may not respond to each one of you individually, I will have nonetheless touched upon the concerns that you have raised.

Question:

Is Doctors Without Border a good organization to donate to?

— Posted by Tom Delane

Answer:

Doctors Without Borders, Partners in Health, Oxfam, Catholic Relief Services, and Project Medishare are among the organizations that had viable and worthy programs in Haiti before the earthquake. This allowed them to respond quickly to the emergency and to provide life-saving support to hundreds, perhaps thousands. They are all worthy of your donations. There are many more organizations — some well known and well financed, some not so popular — that are also rising to the challenge and are able to bring resources to bear on the relief efforts.

Bear in mind, however, that just beyond the search and rescue efforts lies the daunting task of keeping the survivors alive through sustained medical care and tending to the physical and emotional trauma of hundreds of thousands.

Yet it is also important to ensure that Haitians are not simply passive recipients of international charity, but that they are put to work immediately so that they can be the primary builders of the Haitian dream. Thus my sincere hope is that the remarkable support and solidarity that you and most people of the world have given Haiti will not fade away once the spotlight is turned off. There will be plenty of opportunities for people wishing to be involved in the rebuilding of Haiti. Just note that bare-bones accommodations are all that will be available in the near future.

Filed under  //   HelpHaiti   aid   catholic relief services   doctors without borders   donations   earthquake   haiti   new york   new york times   oxfam   united states  
Posted by Jason Wojo 

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Haiti aid tracked by BBC in use by quake survivors | BBC News

By Rajesh Mirchandani
BBC News, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti

Men in Haiti using pink wheelbarrows
The pink wheelbarrows from Oxfordshire are soon put to good use

Fifty tonnes of aid supplies tracked by the BBC from Oxfordshire in the UK are nearing the end of their journey to Haiti's quake-hit capital Port-au-Prince.

Apart from a few stretches littered with potholes, the road from Santo Domingo to Port-au-Prince is in quite good condition.

It snakes past the suburbs of the capital of the Dominican Republic, up and over hills wreathed in lush vegetation and soon into rural villages where grinding poverty is a way of life.

Around 200km (124 miles) west lies Jimani, the scruffy border city strung out along this road.

It is where thousands of Haitian refugees are living and where relief groups have set up clinics.

It is also the first real glimpse of the consequences of the earthquake.

Driven people

The aid convoy passed this way as it carried supplies and emergency equipment from Oxfam, paid for with British donations to the UK Disasters Emergency Committee's (DEC) Haiti Earthquake Appeal.

Aid being lifted onto trucks

In the border zone, it passed through a bustling market - a regular occurrence.

Commerce goes on even if much else in the country can't.

Small trucks packed with people and goods lead the way into the Haitian capital, 100km (62 miles) further west.

The journey from the frontier to the city centre should only take an hour or so, but the approach to this overcrowded city is jammed with traffic and makes for painfully slow progress.

It gives you time to look around - people are everywhere, as well as destruction.

Haitians here no longer seem dazed, they seem driven and barely notice the tumbled-down buildings that line the road.

The aid was taken to Oxfam's offices in the Petionville area.

It is normally a posh hilltop enclave, but it was one of the worst-hit places.

Large elegant villas have tumbled, intricately-wrought iron staircases hang twisted off once sturdy buildings and mounds of rubble line some roads and block others.

DEC APPEAL
The Disasters Emergency Committee is co-ordinating an appeal to help the people of Haiti
There are 13 charities involved including the British Red Cross, Islamic Relief and World Vision
Donate via the DEC website or by calling 0370 60 60 900

Who knows how many dead lie unclaimed in there?

Oxfam's offices consist of two adjacent three-storey buildings - one looks like it was sliced in half with the office interiors exposed through the broken walls.

The organisation lost several staff members.

Now the neighbouring building - which also sustained damage - houses dozens of its workers who have flown in to help.

Pallets of aid that have been transported thousands of miles lie in the courtyard: water bladders, tents, latrine blocks - and the BBC's pink wheelbarrows.

The next day, we travel a few minutes from Oxfam's offices to the Petionville Golf Club, a peaceful spot nestled among lush trees and next to the US ambassador's private residence.

But now US troops man the gate - their Humvee vehicles lined up in the car park while soldiers set up their quarters on the tennis courts.

Dirty job

On the hills and greens behind is a sea of humanity.

The golf course has become a refugee camp and is home to 30,000 earthquake survivors.

And this is where the pink wheelbarrows are put to use.

In one area, people are clearing brush and debris and carting it off in the barrows. Latrine blocks are being laid. These are the beginnings of a much-needed sanitation system.

Refugee tents
Petionville golf course has been turned into a refugee camp

If disease were to break out in this camp, it would spread rapidly. Toilets won't stop it, but they might slow it down.

It's a dirty job, but many people are eager to do it.

That's because the wheelbarrows are not a hand-out, they are a job opportunity and those who use them will be paid for their work.

Oxfam's Andy Bastable, a public health expert who arrived soon after the earthquake, tells me the wheelbarrows are a way of helping Haitians help themselves - a small kick-start for a crumbled economy.

The camp is organised into zones, each with its own committee. One of the organisers, Louis Montas, is allocating wheelbarrows. There are not nearly enough tools for all the people who want them but he tells me 90 people will be able to work.

That is 90 out of 30,000.

"It's a small number," he tells me, "but we've only been working for a week and we're going to build toilets in the whole camp."

Haitians do not want to be dependent. Aid like this is a tiny drop in an ocean of misery.

But it's a start.

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Posted by Jason Wojo 

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VIDEO: Pan-African partners launch 'Africa for Haiti'

http://www.africaforhaiti.com

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Clinton cites exodus effect from Haitian capital | AP

MONTREAL (AP) -- An effective recovery strategy for Haiti must take into account a sudden rush of thousands of quake survivors from Port-au-Prince into the countryside, where the economy cannot sustain them, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Monday.

Clinton, speaking to reporters during a break in a daylong conference intended to review and improve the delivery of short-term aid as well as chart a course for long-term recovery, said she was encouraged by the analysis of Haitian Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive. He told the conference that the exodus from Port-au-Prince has added a new twist to the post-quake challenge.

"The distribution of people (and) their needs have changed," Bellerive said. "We have to reassess the whole country," in terms of job creation and requirements for housing.

At a closing news conference, Clinton said the U.S. would host an international donors conference for Haitian relief in March at U.N. headquarters in New York.

Filed under  //   aid   ap   donors   earthquake   haiti   hillary clinton   housing   rural   secretary of state   united nations   united states  
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Update BBC tracks Haiti Aid delivery - arrives in Dominican Republic

By Gary Duffy
BBC News, Santo Domingo

Wheelbarrows for Haiti tracked by the BBC
The BBC is tracking aid from Oxfordshire, including these wheelbarrows

It was the early hours of the morning when the British Airways flight arrived at the international airport at Santo Domingo, capital of the Dominican Republic.

Among the aid, which BA had carried free of charge, was 50 tonnes of supplies organised by Oxfam - emergency equipment paid for by the UK's Disasters Emergency Committee's Haiti Earthquake Appeal.

The fundraising effort has already reached more than £30m in one week.

The aid, which the BBC has been tracking from Oxfordshire, was swiftly unloaded and then the process began of preparing the cargo to be transported by truck approximately 250 miles to the Haitian capital Port-au-Prince.

The flight also carried supplies from the UN's World Food Programme and Unicef.

With the airport there heavily congested, road transport from the neighbouring Dominican Republic has been an important way to get aid to the Haitian people affected by the earthquake.

This country is a popular tourist destination, but the airport at Santo Domingo is even busier than normal with up to 40 extra flights per day bringing aid into the country.

Loading up the lorries here in the UK is straightforward but once the consignment gets to Haiti, can Oxfam be sure it will reach the people who need it?
BBC's Luisa Baldini

Multiple aid agencies are involved, and around the edges of the main runway the work of loading and unloading aid is a continual process.

Oxfam says that with the announcement that the search for survivors is over, the focus should be on helping the Haitian people.

"The end of search and rescue efforts does not mean we can slow down. Relief and recovery for the survivors is the priority now," says Mark Fried, spokesman for the relief agency.

"Hundreds of thousands who lost everything but their lives need water for drinking and washing. They need latrines to contain the spread of disease. They need shelter and simple household items like cooking pots."

On Friday, respected medical journal The Lancet accused aid agencies and non-governmental organisations of competing against each other rather than working together.

Without naming any organisation, an editorial in the journal said: "NGOs are rightly mobilising, but also jostling for position, each claiming that they are doing the most for earthquake survivors."

However, aid workers on the ground say that claim is unjust.

"I think every organisation wants to do its best to put in place the means that they need," says Florent Mayolle, a logistics manager with Oxfam International and who is working in the Dominican Republic.

Florent Mayolle
Florent Mayolle is working for Oxfam International in Dominican Republic

"That is why, maybe, you can feel a little bit of competition. But now we are forgetting about that and trying to organise ourselves in a way that there is good co-ordination. That is the most important thing for us now."

Referring to the operation to bring in the British aid, as well as supplies from Denmark, Henrik Hansen of the World Food Programme agrees.

"In crises like this aid agencies do come together," he says. "In this particular case, Oxfam requested the World Food Programme provide warehouse capacity and overland transport to Haiti - and we provided those services."

While it was a complicated operation getting the aid organised and on a flight from Stansted to the Dominican Republic via Denmark, where it also picked up supplies, the hard part will be to ensure the aid gets to the people who need it most when it arrives in Haiti, where it was due to arrive on Sunday.

This is another area where the overall relief effort in Haiti has been criticised - with claims of poor distribution and confusion - with some areas even getting too much supplies and others too little.

But aid agencies point to the scale of the disaster in a country that was already lacking in infrastructure, and say the picture is slowly improving.

"People have to understand that we cannot send goods if we are not able to receive it in Port-au-Prince," says Florent Mayolle.

Difficult process

"So we need first to prepare the goods in a good manner, and to send it with security and to be able to receive the goods and afterwards to distribute it properly.

"Until now we had some problem of security, we didn't have the warehouse for storage. We will not be able to send it to lie on the ground without security - it is not possible."

DEC APPEAL
The Disasters Emergency Committee is co-ordinating an appeal to help the people of Haiti
There are 13 charities involved including the British Red Cross, Islamic Relief and World Vision
Donate via the DEC website or by calling 0370 60 60 900

With the warehouse and transport arranged - the small convoy of trucks carrying British aid was able to set off on Saturday afternoon.

Because convoys are only crossing the border twice a day due to security considerations, the drivers were waiting there overnight before completing their journey.

The aid included a wide range of material, from tools that will be useful in improving sanitation to latrine slabs and water tanks.

Oxfam says it is working in seven sites across the Haitian capital - trying to provide help to more than 90,000 people.

For all the main agencies the process of getting supplies to Haiti has been fraught with difficulties, and in the weeks and months to come lessons may well have to be learned from the experience of the last few days.

But among aid workers on the ground there also seems to be an endless amount of goodwill and determination - backed by the generosity of people in countries around the world.

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See where the aid began its journey, from Oxfam's warehouse in Oxfordshire, UK http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8473786.stm

Filed under  //   aid   bbc   delivery   distribution   dominican   haiti   oxfam   oxford   port-au-prince   republic   uk  
Posted by Karina Brisby 

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Video Snapshot: Oxfam delivers water in Port-Au-Prince, Haiti

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Posted by Karina Brisby 

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AUDIO: Louis Belanger's final podcast from Haiti (FRENCH)

(download)

I recorded a 5 min. update on the latest in Haiti and my experience during this time. (Creative Commons)

Filed under  //   HelpHaiti   aid   audio   french   haiti   louis belanger   oxfam  

AUDIO: Caroline Gluck gives an overview of the current situation in Haiti: Banks open; water and sanitation needs; getting the economy moving

(download)

Caroline (Follow @carooxfam) provides an update on the latest situation in Haiti. As search and rescue ends, it is vital to redouble efforts to provide aid to the earthquake survivors. Oxfam is providing water and sanitation facilities in 7 camps.

The banks are open again and Oxfam will start "Cash for Work" projects to boost the economy and help people move from aid to more sustainable models.

It was a difficult day for Oxfam staff as they attended the funeral for a staff member who when an aftershock leveled part of the Oxfam offices.

Thank you for your support: http://bit.ly/oihaiti

Filed under  //   aid   audio   banking   caroline gluck   cash for work   economy   english   haiti   oxfam   sanitation   water  

Video Available of Oxfam Water distribution in Haiti.

Mark Fried, spokesman of the relief agency Oxfam International said:

“The end of search and rescue efforts does not mean we can slow down. Relief and recovery for the survivors is the priority now.

“Hundreds of thousands who lost everything but their lives need water for drinking and washing. They need latrines to contain the spread of disease. They need shelter and simple household items like cooking pots.

“Haitians are grieving, but they are also buoyed by the generous outpouring of support from around the world. Despite the losses they have suffered, they are working hard to turn the empty lots, golf courses and churchyards where they have taken refuge into places where they can live in dignity. Oxfam and other aid agencies are there working alongside them.”

Contact: Louis Belanger, Oxfam International +1 917 224 0834 skype: louisoxfam (we now have high-speed internet for interviews)

 

***Broadcast quality video of Oxfam water distribution at Petionville club, Port-au-Prince, filmed Friday January 22. It’s loosely edited including interview with Oxfam Country Director Yolette Etienne. Downloadable in 3-set profiles.

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Posted by Karina Brisby 

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