earthquake

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By Kevin Connell and Jonathan White

This series of video clips was shot by RMF’s Kevin Connell in the St. Pierre Square tent camp in Petionville, an upper-class neighborhood of Port-au-Prince.  This is a small tent camp set up in a public square but one of the largest tent camps in the city is located on a nearby golf course with an estimated 50,000 people occupying.  Voluntary settlements like these were setup in virtually every square or open space in the city after the disaster.  These clips gives you a little more insight into the living conditions that most of the Haitians displaced by the earthquake are still dealing with.  Little has been done to create any longer term housing solutions, but as you can see from these video clips the Haitian’s are still making the best of a very tough situation.

http://www.realmedicinefoundation.org/video/interview-with-evens

http://www.realmedicinefoundation.org/video/can-i-see-your-place

http://www.realmedicinefoundation.org/video/on-the-way-to-evens-home

http://vimeo.com/12389131

The man being interviewed is Edwin, he’s in his early 20’s, originally from Carrefour, which is a poorer neighborhood nearer to the coast, but had moved to Petionville when he was younger.  Edwin has finished high school where he learned English (spoke fluently) and had done apprenticeship training to be a mechanic.  He said he wasn’t working because there were no jobs available if you don’t know someone or aren’t connected to someone in a position to hire you – kind of the extreme of our unemployment situation here in the US.

Edwin said his time is now focused on taking care of his family, with 6 brothers and sisters.  They all live in the tent shown in the final clip, which is small to say the least.  He didn’t mention how many family members had died in the disaster, but did say that his entire extended family was living in the tents and therefore homeless: aunts, uncles, cousins, etc.  As you can hear in the clips, he references the government as the source of most of the problems, and does not hold out much hope for their ability to lead in the reconstruction.  One surprising thing was that he didn’t seem to hold any complaints for the international community, which was found to be pretty common.  When Kevin asked him what he would say to America, he simply thanked the US for our support.

Life in the community

All the people were very welcoming and friendly, which was a little surprising, given their predicament.  The community had truly carved out a life in that square and things appeared “normal” for them, which really highlighted their adversity/resourcefulness, but also their general acceptance of the dire situation around them.  They were mostly busy doing laundry or taking care of their kids.  Many of the kids were studying out of textbooks.  They all lit up when Kevin said he was from America – they apparently have high hopes for our role in the reconstruction.

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In this article posted on Huffingtonpost.com, Amy Goodman, the renowned host of Democracy Now!, echos much of what we’ve heard from our staff on the ground, and points out that according to the Washington Post only 2% of the promised reconstruction aid has been delivered, and much of the U.S’s $1.15 Billion pledge is still stuck in Congress.  It is also pointed out that they could only find 6 of the 197 organizations that solicited money having publicly available reports detailing their activities.

We at RMF are proud, as always, to have detailed every penny spent on our initiatives and ensure it’s effectiveness..

Here’s the article below, and the link to the original:  (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/amy-goodman/haiti-six-months-after-th_b_645833.html)

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti–July 12 marked the six-month anniversary of the devastating earthquake here in Haiti that killed as many as 300,000 people and left much of the country in ruins. Up to 1.8 million people are living in squalid tent cities, with inadequate sanitation, if any, no electricity and little security, or any respite from the intense heat and the worsening rains. Rape, hunger and despair are constant threats to the people stranded in the camps. Six months ago, the world seemed united with commitments to help Haiti recover. Now, half a year later, the rubble remains in place, and misery blankets the camps, layered with heat, drenched by rain.

After landing in Haiti, we traveled to one of the more than 1,350 refugee camps, Camp Corail. It is right near Titanyen, which was used as a dumping ground for bodies during the first coup against President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, and which, after the earthquake, was used for makeshift mass graves.

Corail is on a flat expanse of white gravel, with orderly rows of tents. During the day, the camp becomes searingly hot, with no trees for protection.

Corail resident Romain Arius told me: “In the situation we’re living here in the tents, we can’t continue like that anymore. We would ask them as soon as possible to give us the real houses that they said they were going to give us so that our situation could improve.”

Soon after we left, we heard that a storm collapsed at least 94 tents and sent hundreds of residents fleeing to find shelter.

Haitians are angry, questioning where the billions of dollars donated in the immediate aftermath of the earthquake have gone. The Disaster Accountability Project found that of the 197 organizations that solicited money following the earthquake, only six had publicly available reports detailing their activities.

From the “international donor community,” the wealthier nations, more than $9 billion was pledged, but to date, only Brazil, Norway and Australia have paid in full. Most of the U.S. pledge of $1.15 billion is now being held up in Congress.

Patrick Elie, a longtime Haitian democracy activist and Haiti’s former secretary of state for public security, spoke with me, about land ownership and the earthquake’s enormous toll:

“Land tenure in Haiti is in total chaos. This is also the result of the behavior of the Haitian elites over centuries. They appropriated land, especially after independence and the end of slavery, which would have been common property. And now, there is a lot of discussion about who owns what piece of land.”

Elie said that in this time of emergency that gives the government the power of eminent domain, the key question is whose land will be seized — communal land that peasants have used for centuries, or the vast tracts of land owned by the elites.

I also spoke with Sean Penn. The two-time Oscar-winning actor came to Haiti after the earthquake. Having just been through a medical crisis with his own teenage son, who underwent major surgery, he was horrified at the stories he was hearing about the amputations being performed in Haiti without anesthesia. Penn founded the J/P Haitian Relief Organization (jphro.org) and has been in Haiti for five of the past six months, managing a refugee camp at the Petionville Club golf course with 55,000 Haitians displaced by the earthquake. Sitting in a large tent, Penn was frustrated. Comparing the U.S. resources being spent in Afghanistan (which he called “a ludicrous exercise”) with the U.S. spending in Haiti, he said,

“You have a war here, you’ve got a surge coming with storms, but no face to hate, no country to rail at, no natural resources, and the faces here are black.”

Penn says J/P HRO will be in Haiti for the long haul: “We plan to adapt, to adjust. I think our next major new push for us will be rubble removal and working with partners to get people returned into neighborhoods and to again work with partners. Take camp management into community management and advocacy.”

Patrick Elie advocates for popular Haitian leadership in the reconstruction: “We are a people who can fend for ourselves. We have a vision of where we want to go. So we do need friends, but we don’t need people to think for us, or to pity us.”

According to the Washington Post, only 2 percent of promised reconstruction aid has been delivered. The hurricane season is upon Haiti, and millions there are counting on all of us making good on our pledges.

For all of Democracy Now!’s coverage of the Haiti earthquake’s six month anniversary, including an exclusive, hour-long interview with Sean Penn, visithttp://www.democracynow.org/tags/haiti_earthquake

Denis Moynihan contributed research to this column.

Amy Goodman is the host of “Democracy Now!,” a daily international TV/radio news hour airing on more than 850 stations around the world. She is the author of “Breaking the Sound Barrier,”recently released in paperback and now a New York Times best-seller.

© 2010 Amy Goodman

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July 12, 2010

By Alex Areces and Jonathan White

As we pause to mark the somber six month anniversary of the earthquake in Haiti and the 230,000 lives lost, it is worth noting not only the significant achievements of the international aid community but also how dire the situation remains and the immense challenges that lie ahead.  Most of the 1.5 million Haitians that were left homeless are still living in the immense tent cities due to sheer scale of the logistical and legal challenges of rebuilding literally hundreds of buildings on mostly private property. The health care system is still in tatters, and struggling to keep up with the contstant flow of new patients from these tent cities.  Much of the money raised in the initial weeks for rebuilding is still sitting on the sidelines with no clear way to spend it.   With no easy solutions on the horizon to re-house this immense displaced population the repairing and re-growth of the health and education systems are more important than ever.  Knowing that it will take many more months for any kind of progress on the resettlement of these people living in tent cities, RMF is committed more than ever to concentrating on the rebuilding of a sustainable health care system to care for this immense displaced population.

The living conditions in many of these tent cities with rubble everywhere, limited sanitation options, and very little protection from the heavy rains common this time of year presents a variety of hazards for these people every day, resulting in multiple injuries and deaths.  Little Chon Oxius, 11 months old, is one of them, and a few weeks ago he came to see Dr. Margaret Degand, RMF’s partner doctor at the Lambert Santé Hospital’s free clinic, with severe burn trauma complications.

Dr. Degand or “Maggie”, as she is fondly referred to is Lambert’s Santé’s Medical Director and founder and one of nation’s top clinicians and plastic surgeon.  Dr. Degand spontaneously opened her private surgical clinic in Pétion-Ville to all the victims of the quake at no cost working tirelessly around the clock for days and weeks to hundreds that came to her clinic desperate for emergency care.   With continued financial support and volunteer assistance, she has been managing to keep her public clinic open. She shares RMF’s vision to increase the overall quality and accessibility of patient care to the public during this crisis. In May 2010, Maggie entered into official partnership with RMF to continue offering Public Care.

Little Chon’s Story

RMF’s Operations Director for Haiti, Alex Areces, has been very busy directing our initiatives in Haiti and had come across Chon part of our work with Lambert’s Santé’ Hospital.  Chon lives in one of the tent cities for Internally Displaced Persons (IDP). His mother was preparing a meal on a “Chien Jambe”, a makeshift stove on the ground, which roughly translates to ‘food cooked so low a dog could cross over it’.  It’s basically a pot sitting atop three stones, with a fire lit below.

As mom prepared the evening meal little Chon found his way to the Chien Jambe and toppled the pot burning both his hands nearly to the bone! Having been treated at other facilities, he was eventually referred to one of the finest (once private) facilities in Haiti that in the past he could never have afforded.  When first seen at Lambert Santé, Chon had severe retraction of all fingers of both hands forming a permanent fist of scar tissue, commonly found in this type of burn.  Grasping objects becomes all but impossible.

On June 15th, Chon underwent a contracture scarring removal and skin grafting of all his fingers in both hands. This lengthy procedure is known for a high degree of failure during the post operative period. Delicate skin grafting has to be protected from retracting again, so each of little Chon’s fingers are fixed in an extended fixation with specialized pins. Frequent follow-up care is critical with meticulous attention given to his wound dressings. Each session lasts more than 30 minutes to each hand! Now just 4weeks following his surgery, the grafted skin on Chon’s hands have almost completely healed with no retraction and a very satisfactory extension. He will shortly start a regimen of applied physical therapy to restore the maximum of mobility to his little fingers.

With a comprehensive rehabilitation program, Chon will recuperate much of his hand function, ensuring that he will be able to thrive and pursue a life without the limitations of the scarred hands from his horrendous burn trauma.

Moving forward

Thanks to the loving and dedicated care of the medical personnel at Lambert Santé and generous support of our donors, Chon and countless others can have fruitful and productive lives.  While much of the donor money raised by the international community during the initial weeks of the crisis is still sitting on the sidelines, RMF continues to assure that any funds raised are spent in a timely and highly effective manner and accountable manner where they are needed most.

More information about our initiatives in Haiti: http://www.realmedicinefoundation.org/initiative/haiti-earthquake-relief-projects

If you’d like to donate to this or any of Real Medicine’s causes, you can click the donate button on this page or through our website at realmedicinefoundation.org


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USAID Haiti Earthquake Fact Sheet 4

USAID Haiti Earthquake Fact Sheet 4

http://media.nj.com/ledgerupdates_impact/photo/haiti-earthquake-peoplejpg-d659963c2ae6ab12_large.jpgWASHINGTON, Jan. 16

KEY DEVELOPMENTS

  • U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and USAID Administrator Rajiv Shah visited Haiti on January 16 to personally convey support to the people of Haiti and meet with Haitian President Rene Preval, other Government of Haiti (GoH) officials, and the U.S. government (USG) field relief team.
  • As of 1500 hours local time on January 16, U.S. urban search and rescue (USAR) teams—working in concert with other international teams—had rescued 22 individuals from collapsed buildings, according to the USAID Disaster Assistance Response Team (USAID/DART).
  • On January 15 and 16, two additional USAR teams arrived in Haiti—from Virginia Beach and New York, respectively—bringing the total number of U.S. teams to seven and the total number of U.S. USAR members to 506.
  • Early on January 16, three USAID/OFDA water treatment units arrived in Haiti on DoD C-130 aircraft.  The units have a combined capacity for providing 300,000 liters of safe drinking water each day.  USAID/OFDA is arranging a second flight carrying an additional water treatment unit, as well as kitchen and hygiene sets for distribution to affected families.
  • On January 16, USAID/OFDA announced the provision of $550,000 to USAID/Dominican Republic (USAID/DR) for the procurement and delivery of safe drinking water to earthquake-affected populations.
  • As of January 16, two of five U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Disaster Medical Assistance Teams (DMATs) had commenced field hospital operations.  A third DMAT team, a Disaster Mortuary Operational Response Team (DMORT), and an International Medical Surgical Response Team (IMSuRT) also arrived on January 15.
  • The U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) has authorized $20 million in overseas humanitarian and disaster assistance appropriations in support of the Haiti earthquake relief effort.
  • On January 15, the USS CARL VINSON delivered more than 30 pallets of relief supplies for transport by helicopter to distribution sites and affected areas.
  • Approximately 5,000 U.S. troops, afloat and onshore, are currently supporting U.S. relief operations in Haiti.
Donate to RMF in Haiti

Real Medicine is coordinating an immediate disaster relief response to aid the people of Haiti as well as preparing a long-term strategy to support their recovery from this devastating series of earthquakes. Your support will help us work with partners within Haiti to provide emergency medical care, food and water in the short term and support efforts for the longer term rebuilding process.

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HAITI QUAKE 2Real Medicine Foundation: Haiti Earthquake Relief:
Michael Lear

Real Medicine Foundation is presently assembling a logistic and medical team to deploy as early as Sunday evening to aid in the efforts on the ground in Haiti.
The recent report from the Pan American Health Organization/WHO highlights the main challenges facing the massive humanitarian effort underway.

Please DONATE to help us help Haiti

Emergency Operations Center Situation Report #1
Haiti Earthquake

One day after a devastating earthquake struck Haiti, information is still difficult to obtain. The PAHO/WHO office in Haiti has been unable to communicate with national health authorities and UN colleagues. For the time being, information is being coordinated through the PAHO/WHO Emergency Operations Center in Washington. On the ground, the past 24 hours have been dedicated to search and rescue and immediate lifesaving activities.

CUMULATIVE IMPACT

• A 7.0 magnitude earthquake struck Haiti on Tuesday afternoon, January 12, 2010, close to the nation’s capital of Port-au-Prince. The quake was felt in the Dominican Republic and as far
away as Jamaica.

• Reports indicate a significant loss of life; there are no official numbers at this time but the
Haitian President has estimated 100,000 people dead or missing.

• Impact on health facilities:
o Several hospitals and health centers have collapsed in the city
− The UN clinic at the Christopher Hotel collapsed
− Martissant emergency room/centre (slum in Port au Prince, MSF managed) is damaged and unstable. All patients evacuated and relocated to tents in the ground. MSF staff have been dealing with a flow of casualties from the town.
− Solidarité maternity hospital, MSF-managed, severely damaged
− Trinité trauma centre (60 beds) MSF-managed, severely damaged
− HUEH ( University Hospital) damaged
− New hospital on Delmas damaged
− Eliazard Germain hospital (Petionville) damaged
− Petits freres et soeurs (Port au Prince) damaged
o Two hospitals were also damaged in the Dominican Republic, in Barahona and Santiago.
o The Argentine military hospital that had been serving MINUSTAH personnel is being augmented by two surgical teams and supplies provided by the Government of Argentina (White Helmets).
•    The airport is currently not in service. A temporary health facility has been established there to provide care.
•    Roads in Port-au-Prince are extremely difficult to navigate due to rubble and large amounts of people. Roads from the border with the Dominican Republic to the Port-au-Prince appear to be open.
•    MINUSTAH (UN Security building) has collapsed causing a loss of life.

PAHO/WHO RESPONSE

•    The Emergency Operations Center in Washington DC is now coordinating logistics and communication.
•    Experts from the PAHO/WHO Regional Disaster Response team will arrive in the Dominican Republic this evening. They will travel to Haiti on Thursday.
•    The UN Health Cluster as soon as possible.
•    Supplies have been released from PROMESS, the pharmaceutical warehouse of Haiti’s Ministry of Health.
•    Trauma kits to care for 500 victims for 10 days are on their way.
•    PAHO/WHO has advanced USD 200,000 from its disaster response fund to initiate immediate critical activities.
•    The PAHO/WHO office in Haiti has sustained damage and staff will be working out of temporary facilities until a structural assessment of the building is completed.

OTHER ACTIONS

•    Many PAHO/WHO member countries in Latin America and the Caribbean have offered and are mobilizing humanitarian aid to Haiti.
•    USAID/OFDA office has deployed a disaster assistance response team (DART) comprised of 11 people as well as Urban Search and Rescue Teams.
•    A UN Medical Emergency Response team will be sent to Haiti, including stress counselors
•    All teams sent to the area must be self-sufficient in terms of food and water as well as  financial means (cash) as the banking system is down.

DONATE to RMF efforts in Haiti

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Haiti quake damages pile up

"Palais National d'Haiti" The Haitian version of the "U.S. Wh... on Twitpic Picture of the "PALAIS NATIONAL" before and after the Earthqu... on Twitpic

Looks like the Presidential Palace and the UN peacekeeping HQ are among the more prominent buildings lost in today’s quake in Haiti. Obviously the least of the issues.

The U.S. embassy survived. As of now, nearly midnight, I have not heard what the U.S. military is doing. USS Carl Vinson is underway and would be a great choice to send.

It’s night in Port-au-Prince. It will not be a quiet one, with aftershocks continuing. I have to wonder about looting, as well. The UN is there to keep the peace for a reason and this chaos is perfect for the gangs to re-emerge.

The northern parts of the country seem to have suffered much less damage.

CNN

Mike Godfrey, an American contractor working for the U.S. Agency for International Development, said “a huge plume of dust and smoke rose up over the city” within minutes of the quake — “a blanket that completely covered the city and obscured it for about 20 minutes.”

Witnesses reported damaged buildings throughout the capital, including the president’s residence and century-old homes nearby, and The Associated Press reported that a hospital collapsed.

CNN–List of Haitian twitterers and their tweets

CNN – What We’re Hearing

Earthquake in Haiti – aftershocks as recorded by the US Geological Survey

Earthquake in Haiti - aftershocks as recorded by the US Geological Survey

Algunos de los daños ocasionados por el terremoto en Haiti #... on Twitpic La CIMO policia "especial" rescatando personas #HaitiQuake #H... on Twitpic Haiti earthquake on Twitpic fotos del terremoto de #Haiti #Earthquake  on Twitpic

thekid0216 on January 13, 2010
and it still keeps shaking!!! after shocks in DR
Ferdy14 on January 13, 2010
Poor people!!! God bless them
gpatriparra on January 13, 2010
Cuanto lo siento
aideemzt on January 13, 2010
Oh my God!!!!

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Earthquake kills 75 in Indonesia

In Indonesia, a 7.6 magnitude earthquake hit early this morning near the city of Padang, on the island of Sumatra. At least 75 people are dead and officials say that number is expected to rise with thousands trapped under the rubble of collapsed buildings, including at least two hospitals.

This follows another earthquake with an 8.0 magnitude that struck near the South Pacific island nations of Samoa and Tonga and the US territory of American Samoa.  The quake triggered a massive tsunami that killed an estimated 100 people, including more than 30 people in American Samoa. Indonesian Children

Dune film

Suicide Blonde

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Read more:

BBC news: Dozens dead in Indonesian quake

The Guardian: Desperate hunt for the living as Sumatra quake toll mounts

Find out about Real Medicine Programs in Indonesia

Deep End of the Ocean, The movie download

The Governors Wife aka Deadly Suspicion buy

Xtro movie


Shakespeare in Love psp


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