Haiti Quake Updates

Updates from aid workers and journalists in Haiti 
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Oxfam's work at the 'General Hospital' in Haiti

By Caroline Gluck @carooxfam
It was a relief to read the sign on the wall: no dead bodies after 3.30 pm. My watch showed it was 4pm.  Thankfully, when I poked my head into the morgue at the Hôpital Universitē  de l’Ētat de Haiti, also known as the General Hospital, the room was empty.

Outside, though, the ground was grimly sticky underfoot – a reminder of how many bodies had been taken to the public morgue for disposal since the earthquake that struck Haiti nearly two weeks ago.

I’d come to the public hospital, one of the largest  in Haiti, to look at the work Oxfam had been doing there.  My colleague, Karine Deniel, a public health specialist, focussing on preparedness and emergency response work, had been called to the hospital the week before.    

She had been visibly shocked by what she saw: the hospital was packed with more than 1,000 patients, many of whom were surgery cases.  There was no running water and no electricity.  

Outside the morgue, she said, piles of bodies wree laid out covered with flies.  There was no water close by for doctors to make plaster casts for those with broken limbs; and water she saw in a bucket used to mop the floor was black.   “It smelled bad; it smelt of death”, she said.

Oxfam installed a 5,000 litre water bladder in the hospital, and also trucked water to the site so that soiled surgery clothes and bedding could be washed, the kitchen could re-open, and workers in the morgue could wash down the floors, and lessen the putrefying sickly smell of corpses.

“Oxfam has helped”, said Hencia Josena, one of the laundrywomen.  “Before we had no water, no soap.”

Staff told me nothing could be washed in the hospital after the earthquake struck until Oxfam trucked in water more than a week later.   “Before Oxfam came it was a mess”, said laundry operator, Jean-Robert Deus.  “In the surgery room, doctors had blood stains over their clothes.”

Many patients still remain outside the main hospital buildings, many of which were badly destroyed, being treated in tents.  They’re scared to go indoors, for fear of after-shocks.  

The dedication of staff working there both impressed and humbled me.  From the laundry washers, to the kitchen staff, to the steady stream of volunteer medics like George Williams, from New York City, who works in the triage area.  
“As bad as things are, this is the best humanitarian effort that I have ever seen”, he told me, also praising the “phenomenal” Haitian doctors he had worked with.  “It’s the spirit, the humanitarian effort reaching out from all over the world.”  

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PHOTOS: Oxfam aid loaded on planes for Haiti

Your donations at work! Pallets of water treatment gear are ready to be loaded onto a Oxfam aid flight leaving East Midlands airport . The plane carried - 30 tonnes of equipment including water tanks, tap stands, purification tablets, buckets, latrine slabs – all needed to provide clean water and vital sanitation to people in quake-struck Haiti. Photo Doug Marke/PAGEONE PHOTOGRAPHY

Please continue your support: http://bit.ly/oihaiti

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Filed under  //   HelpHaiti   aid   earthquake   haiti   humanitarian aid   oxfam   photo   photos   relief  

Photos: The desperate need for water in Haiti | TIME

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With in Reach
Survivors gesture for water being handed out by US troops. "We're still running out of water faster then we can deliver it," Marine Maj. Will Klumpp said.

Support Oxfam's work to bring water to the people of Haiti:
http://bit.ly/oihaiti

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Posted by Jason Wojo 

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PHOTOS: Oxfam water distribution in Haiti

 

Oxfam water distribution Delmas 48 (former golf course)

We have set up a water bladder that can hold 10,000 litres of water; and set up 3 other sites where the water distribution can take place.  Water trucks didn’t arrive yesterday because of lack of fuel; only one bladder in the site is operational; we hope to get the others running today (Monday)

 

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GIVENSON SILVER 7 years

“I’m very happy because its great to be able to have something safe to drink.  Its very difficult to get water.  One person in my family is sick with diarrhoea…we have all been drinking whatever we can find.”

FABIEN MARIE MICHELE, 29

Its great because people are helping us.  We have nothing else, nothing at all.   I have one son, 7 years old.  My house was destroyed.  We have been sleeping out here in the open air ever since the earthquake.  Its not great but its ok…and anyhow, this is all we have. 

“Clean water is the most important thing for us.  Without water, you cant live.  

At the moment, we have enough food, but as the days go by, its getting more and more difficult.”

TIBILO REVEILLE, 10 years old

(Bandage on his head…he has toothache)

“We are very thirsty.  We’ve had no clean water; and I’m very happy to get this today.”

ALEXON MARIE-LOURDES, 58  2 CHILDREN

“I’m very happy.  We have had no safe water to drink and we’ve been very thirsty. 

We had some bottled water, but that’s finished.  Since Wednesday – the day after the quake – we have been drinking fizzy drinks.

“Our house was completely destroyed but at least we are all safe.

“In this place disease is spreading. There are no proper toilets.  There are some people robbing others.  Its not good. 

“If we could find water, get some money, find shelter…these are the things we need now. But water is the most important.  Now we have some clean water and we can drink when we’re thirsty.  We are safe.”

MONES JERMAIN 29  (white top)

1 son

“I’m very happy to get this.  I used to drink other water I found, but it wasn’t any good and I’ve been worried about getting sick.  I’ve drunk unsafe water before because there was no other choice; I couldn’t find good water.

“What are our main needs?  Water, food, everything is a problem.  Each day gets worse.”  

JOSUE MEROSIER, 24   [pic 1215 or 1216 or 1217]

Volunteer at the camp helping with water distribution; he is a teacher.

“This camp is vast.  Some people have been stealing here; but there are police around now and we ae trying to stop that.

“Security is a problem and food is a problem.  We cant get any money from the bank and we have none at home. There is some food around; but you need money to buy it.

“Sanitation is one of the biggest problems. People go anywhere. Its getting dirty and smelly; and we need toilets.”

“I am sleeping here; its too dangerous to sleep at home.

“I’m helping out with the neighbourhood group here.  We want to help and we all live around here; we want to do something.”

ROSNY ALTIDOR 22

“Its been difficult to find water.  Before, we got water.  We  drank from unsafe sources.  It wasn’t clean.  

Water is the most imortant thing. You cant do anything wihtout water.  After water, the next most important thing we need is food; there are many problems.

“Its been two days since I’ve had any food.   Things are gteting worse.  I have no money to buy food; its all in the bank and they are closed “

 

 

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