Haiti Quake Updates

Updates from aid workers and journalists in Haiti 
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AUDIO: Oxfam's Haiti Country Director, Yolette Etienne on 'The Story' | American Public Media

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One of the main worries in Haiti now is health and sanitation. One agency that works directly on those issues is Oxfam. Yolette Etienne is Haiti's country director for Oxfam. She has been working long hours just to make the places around the tents clean. At the same time Yolette is dealing with her own tragedies. Her mother was killed, her house was destroyed, and now she's responsible for two orphans. Yolette joins Dick Gordon to talk about the realities of living and working in Haiti after the quake.

Filed under  //   Yolette Etienne   audio   english   haiti   oxfam   radio   sanitation   water  

AUDIO: Mark Fried talks about Oxfam's work at the General Hospital and expanding sanitation projects in Haiti

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Oxfam's Mark Fried has taken over where I left off. He posted an audio update from Haiti this morning.

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

Filed under  //   aid   distribution   earthquake   haiti   oxfam   port-au-prince   quake   water  
Posted by Karina Brisby 

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

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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

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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.

Filed under  //   aid    distribution   earthquake   haiti   media   video   water  
Posted by Karina Brisby 

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Oxfam distributes water in Port au Prince | NECN

18 hours 2 min 36 sec ago
Oxfam distributes water in Port au Prince

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(NECN) - Louis Belanger of Oxfam America joins NECN from Haiti with an update on the effort to give food and water, to the homeless, injured and sick.

Belanger says the day got off to a rough start when an aftershock occurred. Shortly after, Oxfam began distributing fresh and clean water at five major sites across Port au Prince.

Belanger joins NECN on the phone with more.

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Posted by Jason Wojo 

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AUDIO: Oxfam expands water distribution and begins sanitation projects (ENGLISH)

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Our Oxfam teams continues to expand our water distribution, which will bring water to 80,000 people by the end of the week. In addition, we will begin digging latrines to provide safe sanitation. The team is also working in several communities to setup "Cash for work" programs to help get the economy moving again.

Please support Oxfam's work: http://bit.ly/oihaiti

Filed under  //   HelpHaiti   audio   english   haiti   louis belanger   oxfam   sanitation   water  

AUDIO: Oxfam expands water distribution and begins sanitation projects (FRENCH)

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Filed under  //   HelpHaiti   audio   french   haiti   louis belanger   oxfam   sanitation   water  

Helen Hawkings: Diary from Haiti, part 2 | Oxfam International Blogs

Saturday 16th January

Today we were back at the golf course, previously an exclusive area for the rich of Port au Prince, it is now home to an estimated 10 – 15,000 people during the day and 50,000 at night. Our mission for the day is to start distributing water.

People staying in the camps have organised committees to manage the site. There seem to be more committees than are absolutely necessary and they do not always agree on how things should be done. Unfortunately when the water distribution started there was a disagreement regarding which committee was in charge and the situation became rather heated.

Every day many people approach me asking me what can I give, what am I doing here, why am I only working in this camp when there are so many people still staying in the communities near their homes who need help? I am not God, I tell them that today we are starting with providing water here. There is a colossal amount of aid pouring into the country so I tell them that we are starting in areas with the biggest concentrations of people so that we can reach lots of people in a short space of time but that we have not forgotten them and that we are doing as much as we can.

This evening the team of Oxfam staff that we have been working with in Cap Haitien in the north of Haiti arrived at our door. We have been training them and working closely with them in emergency preparedness so that when disaster strikes they are ready to immediately respond. This was a wonderful end to the day.

While I would like to believe that the loud bangs that rang out near our house just before midnight last night were fireworks, I think that would be slightly naïve of me. Reports of pillaging are rife. This afternoon we passed 2 bodies on the road, which were left there uncared for. We were told that locals killed them as they were looting and stealing. An unofficial curfew of 10pm has been proposed.

Sunday 17th January

Something that you can be sure about here is that your day will not go as you expect it to. After all the complications that we were dealing with yesterday, today we had planned a problem free day. It was an important day for us. We wanted to have the two bladders that we installed yesterday and the three that the teams prepared today full of water so that we could distribute 100,000 litres of drinking water to people who really need it.

I arrived at the golf course at midday. The truck containing 5,000 litres of water was filling the water storage container that we had constructed. After a quick final leak fix things were looking good, and we were ready to go. Our first recipient was a young boy looking slightly overwhelmed clutching a small white water container, which he quickly filled. Soon the people who had waited patiently in the queue were receiving fresh drinking water. It feels great when we can see our work is making an impact. I had ordered 10 more lorry loads of water to go to the sites we were working in. Our national WASH team had set up committees to manage each water point. We waited and waited for the trucks to come with the water. No one came.

Drinking water is not the only scarce liquid in high demand. There is also an acute shortage of petrol. The water company was unable to come and distribute the water, of which they had plenty, because their lorries did not have enough petrol. I had to relay this hugely disappointing information to the committees and to the people waiting to receive water who took the news well considering the situation.

The number of people staying with us has risen from just the four of us on Tuesday night, to a respectable 21. Today Oxfam staff arrived from the Dominican Republic, England and Mexico. Together we will be able to achieve great things. In the meantime we have to cope with not having a functioning flushing toilet, no cooking facilities and a limited water supply. This makes entertaining at home a more creative challenge!

Tomorrow is a new day that I hope will be problem free and full of 100, 000 litres of fresh drinking water!

Please donate now to Oxfam's Haiti Earthquake Emergency Appeal - http://bit.ly/oihaiti

Filed under  //   earthquake   haiti   helenhawkings   humanitarian aid   oxfam   water  
Posted by Joel Bassuk 

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