Haiti Quake Updates

Updates from aid workers and journalists in Haiti 
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VIDEO: Young people help to improve sanitation in Haiti| UNICEF

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti, 22 February 2010 Sanitation is among the most urgent concerns in Haiti following Januarys earthquake. UNICEF estimates that overall, 1.1 million displaced people require emergency latrines. The agency and its partners plan to install over 10,000 latrines in the short term and another 20,000-plus within six months.

To help achieve this goal, UNICEF has enlisted its non-governmental partner, the Haitian Out-of-School Youth Livelihood Initiative (known by its French acronym, IDEJEN), to construct 1,000 sanitary blocks, which include latrines, showers and handwashing facilities. The initiative has enlisted 1,200 young participants to build the sanitary blocks.

"What you are seeing here is a sanitary block made by IDEJEN youth," she said, pointing to a unit with three latrines, which will also have a hand-washing station and a shower. "We'll take care of everything, in terms of management of the sanitary block, in terms of management of the excreta and in terms of evacuation of used water.

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With rain, urgency grows for shelter and sanitation in Haiti's capital | Oxfam International Blogs

Late last week, rain doused the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince, heightening the dread of hundreds of thousands of people there who have been living in makeshift shelters since a massive earthquake destroyed great swaths of their city in January.

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The rains start in earnest in April. And hurricane season arrives June 1. Cardboard and bed sheets--the materials that now serve as roofs and walls for countless people--are no match for Mother Nature. Even a plastic tarp will offer little comfort when the waters rush and rise. And they will.

This is Haiti where unchecked harvesting of wood--for construction, for charcoal--has left 98 percent of the country deforested, adding to the potential for flooding when heavy rain falls. And with many of the drainage channels around the capital now clogged with debris, where will the water go?

I'm remembering the anxious faces of the Haitians I met recently camped at Centre Sportif de Carrefour, a sports complex where several thousand homeless people had taken refuge under a variety of shelters, many of them constructed from sheets of white plastic stamped with "made in China" logos.

When it rains hard here, said Libermann Lexident, one of the camp leaders, the water pools up to three feet deep. That's hip high on an adult. Everything below three feet gets soaked. Even so, he said, people would rather cope with the flooding than move back to their damaged homes, so profound is the fear the quake has left in its wake.

"If it's raining, it's going to be very hard," said Lexident. "So far, we've been praying. It's been answered. If it rains, we don't know where to go."

Last week's downpour, drumming a warning on the plastic tarps strung across the capital, has heightened the urgency for tens of thousands of homeless families.
Oxfam is distributing tents and plastic sheeting to thousands of them, and estimates indicate that there is enough shelter material in the capital, or en route, to meet the needs of about 50 percent of those who have been displaced. And aid groups think that as many as 40 percent of them could return to their homes if their buildings are declared safe. Oxfam has a team of structural engineers in the capital right now assessing that issue.

But as the rain approaches, the concern isn't just for weather worthy shelter. Sanitation services have become a critical issue as well--especially latrines.

The numbers are frightening.

The UN estimates that the devastated region needs 18,000 toilets, but as the first-month anniversary of the quake approached, aid groups and local workers had been able to dig fewer than 1,000 latrines. Oxfam had installed more than 20 percent of them--testament to our commitment in this area of expertise.

But the need remains enormous, especially as the rains approach and threaten to slop human waste into temporary settlements and crowded camps where there is little room to improve the drainage.

"We now need a surge in effort to improve sanitation facilities for people in Haiti," said Marcel Stoessel, head of Oxfam in the country. "Let us not kid ourselves that this is going to be easy. It requires a Herculean humanitarian effort from all quarters. Around 230,000 people lost their lives on Jan. 12. It is our priority to make sure that we don't let that number grow."

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Honoring the lost, rebuilding from the rubble | Oxfam International Blogs

 

Oxfam 45,000 litre water tank is hooked up to the golf club's sprinkler system to distribute water around the camp. Credit: Oxfam
February 9

 Today a colleague went to visit her old friend in Carrefour, a commune where we are working, and found her sitting on the flat roof of her house. At night she stays with her nephew but during the day she sits on the rubble left from her house. She says she can�t leave as people will take her things. I feel sad as there is not really anything left to take. People have lost the small things that mean the most, old photos, personal documents etc. The street where she lives is a deserted ghost town where there used to always be people moving around.

February 10

As well as providing latrines and water, we also distribute hygiene kits ; buckets, basins, soap, sanitary towels and underwear so that people can maintain at least a basic level of personal hygiene. We are starting our distribution in one of the first camps we visited. Security at distributions takes a lot of organising so our strategy is to concentrate on distributing our kits to the smaller camps and communities where there are less people to manage who are less likely to receive aid from other organisations.

This morning we are having a meeting on the roof of the half of our building  that survived the earthquake. Looking over at the other building it is amazing that more people did not die. I quietly thank whoever is up there looking out for me. Not being able to open my door may have saved my life. The wall above my office collapsed. My colleague in the office opposite mine was not so lucky.

February 11

 Sometime after 4am a sound stopped my sleep. Not the mosquitoes that somehow manage to get through my net to dine on me, nor the roar of another earthquake, it was torrential rain. Haiti is not ready for the rainy season, which is still several weeks away. It was raining hard. Large tent and plastic sheeting distributions have already taken place but many people are going to get very wet. With the rain also come more risks from the bacteria in the rubbish and excreta which can be washed into the sources of water which people drink and cause diarrhoeal disease.

It�s been a couple of weeks since I last visited the golf course , this was the first camp that I visited that we immediately started work in. It has continued to grow and is now the biggest camp that we support with an estimated 45,000 people sleeping here.  

My colleague Karine and her team have installed a T45 big water tank which holds 45,000 litres of water which is being distributed around the camp using the existing sprinkler system used to keep the golfing green fresh. Following this morning�s rain the golf course is far from green. I leave with my shoes heavy with clay mud. Once the rains really begin, this camp will become a mud bath.

Building latrines for sanitation, is one of Oxfam's priorities in Haiti now to prevent the spread of diseases. Credit: OxfamMany people here are unfamiliar with latrine use. I am taking a rest for a couple of days but before I go I need to take photos that can be used for hygiene promotion materials explaining how to made best use of the latrines we have installed.

February 12

Today is one month since the earthquake struck Haiti. The President has made today a day of mourning across the country. This weekend there will be 3 days of fasting and praying to honour the thousands of people Haiti lost in the earthquake.

When I look back over the past month to the first time I visited the camps where we work, they had received no help. In most cases I was the first foreigner that visited them. I am not a technical person but as a 2 person team we were doing everything necessary to get our water project running to start helping people. Now Oxfam has a team of national and international staff in place. Haiti is receiving a huge amount of support from both the region and beyond. There is still an enormous amount of unmet needs particularly for shelter, sanitation and psychological support but in the past month we have helped nearly 100, 000 people. I hope that in the next month we can help 100, 000 more.

Find out more about Oxfam%u2019s humanitarian response to the Haiti earthquake

Haiti earthquake: What Oxfam is doing

Map of Oxfam's relief work in Haiti

Witnesses and heroes of the Haiti earthquake

Oxfam's cash-for-work program in Haiti: photo gallery

 

 

 

 

 

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Haiti earthquake one month on : Oxfam says "still a mountain to climb" in Haiti


International agency Oxfam warns today a Herculean effort is still needed if public health in Haiti is not to deteriorate. Time is pressing as there are only six weeks before the start of the raining season.

The agency said there have been enormous and successful efforts in getting clean water and food to people since the quake hit exactly a month ago. To date, Oxfam  has provided assistance to about 100,000 people and continues to scale up operations, planning to reach at least 500,000 people by the end of July.

But the same progress must now be made in tackling poor sanitation and the aid agency says a surge in effort is needed from the international community, the UN and aid agencies in advance of the rainy season, due in April.

The organisation fears that cases of diarrhoea and other water-borne diseases could spread given the combination of poor drainage, a limited number of latrines and crowded living conditions.

Oxfam has so far installed latrines at 11 key sites and many more are planned. Public health teams are also working with communities to reduce the risk of disease by rubbish-clearing and awareness-raising. But there is still a long way to go.

“Thanks to the generous public and political response the aid effort has rapidly expanded to meet people’s needs but there is still a mountain to climb.

“We now need a surge in effort to improve sanitation facilities for people in Haiti. Let us not kid ourselves that this is going to be easy, it requires a Herculean humanitarian effort from all quarters.

“Around 230,000 people lost their lives on January 12. It is our priority to make sure that we don’t let that number grow,” said Marcel Stoessel, Head of Oxfam in Haiti.

The temporary camps where people have congregated are fast-becoming over-crowded slums and need upgrading to allow easy access to basic services. More ditches need to be dug to improve the drainage in the crowded camps before the rains begin. Oxfam also fears for the safety of people who have moved to areas that are at risk from land and mudslides because of the upcoming rains.

The Government has plans to resettle people but it still needs to clarify whether there is government land available or if it needs to confiscate private land instead. It also needs to ensure that people are not forced to move away from their communities, that new camps are safe and that there is a plan in place to ensure that camps do not becoming dumping grounds outside the city. These decisions need to be taken quickly.

The huge logistical challenges facing the aid effort - communications, transport, loss of key staff, destroyed physical and political infrastructure – are slowly being overcome but bottlenecks still remain.

While the coordination of the aid effort is going well, Oxfam said it still needs to be improved. Hundreds of agencies now in Haiti - estimates vary from 500 to 900 – are playing their part in the response and the UN has made great strides in coordinating the aid effort but along with the Government it needs to provide stronger leadership.

As more than 75 per cent of Haiti’s capital needs to be rebuilt, reconstruction will take many years and needs the full support of the international community, Oxfam said. The Government needs to elaborate on its reconstruction vision as the many rumours about its plans are causing a sense of anxiety amongst those who have lost their homes.

“Whatever the vision of the Haitian government is, it should ensure that a newly built Haiti does not recreate the injustices and inequalities of the past.

“The country’s reconstruction ought to be led by Haitians for Haitians,” Stoessel said. “With more than 80 per cent below the poverty line before the earthquake, the needs of Haiti’s poor must be central.”

Though the focus of the aid effort centres around the capital, where the majority of needs are, there is a growing concern about conditions in the countryside where nearly 500,000 people have fled.  Vigilance is needed to ensure that their needs do not fall off the radar and support must be provided to those hosting them.

ENDS


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Interview: Oxfam’s Liz Lucas In Haiti | HeadCount Blog

Providing water and preventing diarrhea is Oxfam’s main mission in Haiti right now, says Liz Lucas, the relief organization’s American press officer. And HeadCount is donating all money collected at shows through March 1 to Oxfam America’s relief effort in Haiti. (Learn more about how you can donate here.)

Emergency-response organizations from around the world have been stationed in Haiti since the earthquake shook the poverty-stricken country four weeks ago, causing an estimated 230,000 deaths to date. Musicians, including Radiohead and will.i.am, have also been coming together in various ways to support Haiti. (Check out will.i.am’s Superbowl remix of The Who’s “My Generation” here.

Liz Lucas filled us in on the relief effort and her personal experiences on the island of Dominica. She told us about what’s being delivered as well as what will be needed in the months and years ahead in order to rebuild Haiti’s environment, infrastructure, and, most importantly, the lives of as many as a million displaced survivors.

HeadCount: Tell us about Oxfam’s relief work in Haiti and what your role has been thus far.

Right now, Oxfam is focused on water and sanitation. This means we provide and try to ensure access to water for drinking and washing, as well as latrines and hygiene kits. Sanitation will remain an important health issue in the coming weeks to avoid the spread of disease – increasing cases of diarrhea are already being reported. The situation will be exacerbated when rains flood the solid-waste areas and drainage ditches, some of which have become blocked by rubble. Most at risk are those living in temporary settlements and crowded conditions with little, if any, space to improve drainage, and those at the camps’ lower end, which are liable to flood. Oxfam has installed 150 latrines to date, and a team has just arrived in Port au Prince to do a major solid waste disposal project.


We’ve also been working on cash-for-work initiatives. We started the program in Haiti because it’s an effective alternative to food distributions when sufficient food is available for people to buy. We pay people to do necessary jobs in their community, such as removing trash, waste, and light rubble. It gives them an income to buy food with. We’ve seen that markets are open and heard repeatedly that food is available – people simply lack the cash to purchase these goods.

There seem to be mixed messages about how efficiently help is being delivered. Have you seen things progressing on a day-to-day basis?

Things are getting better and every day we see more aid getting through. Our relief operations have seen a marked improvement over the last two weeks. We have a steady truck pipeline from Santo Domingo and now operate eight sites, with more to come. We have our full complement of experts on the ground. A steady stream of water trucks keeps our water points full. We’ve built latrines and water points serving more than 90,000 people at this point. The cash-for-work program is up and running.

But humanitarian agencies are facing serious challenges in reaching millions of affected Haitians quickly. The enormous scale of the disaster means hundreds of thousands of people need a massive amount of assistance. This has required large volumes of aid, and more humanitarian workers need to be transported into and around Haiti. The main airport at Port au Prince is functioning with limited capacity, while the main sea port, though usable, was badly damaged. In addition, the United Nations and several humanitarian agencies suffered many fatalities and injuries to their staff, including the head of the UN mission.

President Obama laid out a plan to send military forces to maintain peace and quell any post-disaster unrest. What are your thoughts on the US government’s reaction to the earthquake?

There are principles to guide the international humanitarian community on the use of military assets in humanitarian response. Essentially, military assets should be requested only where there is no comparable civilian alternative and when such assets can meet a critical humanitarian need. The US military plays an important role in responding to huge disasters such as the Haiti earthquake, especially with logistics and security, which are greatly needed at the outset of a devastating disaster. This isn’t the first time the US military has been asked to respond to a disaster, and it’s to be commended for its efforts.

However, the US military must operate under the leadership of civilian emergency-relief professionals whose mission, mandate, and expertise lie in mounting effective relief and recovery operations. The President’s designation of USAID as the lead agency for the US government’s response to the earthquake means the military is in a supporting role to civilian development and humanitarian response professionals. As such, relief efforts carried out by the military should end as soon as civilians are capable of taking over those efforts effectively.

The image projected by the media is one of people coming together and holding onto their faiths, even in suffering. How are the Haitian people coping with this tragedy from your point of view?

From what I’ve seen on the ground, Haitian people are coming together to cope with this tragedy. Many Oxfam staffers have lost homes and loved ones and yet still come to work each day to support the aid effort. People are offering shelter to one another and sharing what little they have.

Has there been a widespread eruption of violence since you arrived?

Not at all. What we’ve seen more than anything is Haitians working together and sharing what resources they have. There has been sporadic violence and we’re monitoring the situation. So far, our aid stocks have not been looted and our aid workers have not been attacked.

What’s been the most difficult part of your work? And what has been most gratifying?

By far the most gratifying party has been watching our Haitian staff come to work in the face of unbelievable personal tragedies. It’s been incredible to see their dedication to assisting fellow Haitians. This has made us all strive to be and do better as well.

What’s the next step after basic needs have been delivered and direct aid begins to pull out of Haiti

After basic needs have been delivered, the next step will be rebuilding and making sure the world continues to support Haiti. Some of the most pressing issues will certainly include finding space where people will want to live and having access to safe materials to build homes that can withstand potential threats – including hurricanes, future earthquakes, and aftershocks. Job creation and income earning will also become major issues. Haiti faces problems that may make the stabilization and recovery phases stretch out over a long period despite everyone’s best efforts. First, there’s the preexisting weakness of public institutions now utterly devastated by the quake. Basic public services, like water and sanitation, that used to be woefully inadequate are now simply absent.

Earthquakes are natural disasters. But how can manmade disasters be prevented? Since many institutions that provided a voice for the poor have been destroyed, how can we sustain ongoing efforts to fight poverty and rebuild infrastructure?

The humanitarian response should form the basis for a sustained international reconstruction effort. This would reconstruct what was destroyed while establishing equitable international and regional policies toward Haiti and focus on the country’s most vulnerable communities, especially women. There are three key criteria: First, all efforts should be made to reduce people’s vulnerability and increase their resilience. Second, public institutions lie at the heart of good development. We must ensure that the new Haiti has strong institutions able to provide basic services and guide the reconstruction effort. Third, solutions cannot be imposed from outside. Haitians must have voice and vote to control their own destiny.

As with many organizations, I imagine Oxfam’s efforts have had to adapt to the changing
needs of developing countries. In your experience, how does Oxfam differ from other organizations in its approach to relief?

Oxfam America is an international relief and development organization that creates lasting solutions to poverty, hunger, and injustice. We’re particularly effective because, beyond immediate relief work, Oxfam works with local and national partner organizations to build alliances, networks, and create strong, effective organizations that eventually no longer need our support. Most importantly, what our partners teach us about the best solutions to poverty is just as valuable as the funding and collaboration we provide them.

People have come from many parts of to offer their services in Haiti. Have you worked with other relief organizations since you’ve been there?

We work with local NGO partners, camp committees, Haitian government ministries, and other actors. We’re part of coordination teams with many other NGOs. It’s important for all of us to work together.

(Photo of Petitionville tent city by Liz Lucas.)

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Handling a crisis on the scale of Haiti | BBC News

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Troops, doctors and aid workers are flowing into Haiti, while nations pledge millions of dollars in aid. But how do you handle a crisis of this magnitude? Richard Gordon and Mike Evans of the Bournemouth University Disaster Management Centre, outline the planning and potential pitfalls of such an operation. Read the Full Article>>>

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Overwhelming generosity funds Oxfam’s immediate short-term work in Haiti

Funds still needed to help Haiti recover and rebuild over years

International agency Oxfam said today that public generosity had secured enough money to fully fund its immediate emergency work in Haiti over the next six months. Oxfam said it is keeping its national appeals open for people to donate toward its longer-term plans to help Haitians to recover and rebuild their lives, over approximately the next three-to-five years.

Oxfam’s 14 independent affiliate groups have raised nearly $90 million in their home markets. The group intends spending around $18 million of this within the next six months. Oxfam is still increasing its aid effort in Haiti to reach more and more people. So far it has reached 85,000 people with water and sanitation and temporary shelter and plans over the on-coming days to reach up to 25,000 more. Oxfam is also giving people cash for clearing up their neighborhood and digging latrines and handing out essential hygiene kits.

Oxfam says that the longer-term needs will be great given the scale of destruction and the level of pre-existing poverty in Haiti. “We are putting our priority on reaching as many more people with emergency assistance and we are also planning for longer-term rebuilding,” said Oxfam’s humanitarian director Fernando Almansa.

“This will involve helping to rehabilitate water and sanitation systems in poorer urban neighborhoods. We will also look at appropriate ways of helping people to increase their food production in sustainable ways. We will help local communities to have a voice in how the government and the international community go about rebuilding Haiti.”

Oxfam said that due to the scale of the devastation and the level of poverty in Haiti it will take a great deal of aid sustained over many years before the people of Haiti recover from this disaster.

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