Thursday, October 28, 2010

Cholera feared near Haiti capital‎


(bbc.co.uk)
Aid agencies in Haiti say they fear that suspected new cases of cholera might mean the epidemic is moving closer to the capital Port-au-Prince.

Suspected cases are being investigated in three new departments, health officials in Haiti said on Wednesday.

They said nearly 300 people were now known to have died in the cholera outbreak.

The UN is investigating allegations that excrement from Nepalese peacekeepers caused the epidemic.

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Sarah Jacobs from the aid organisation Save the Children told the BBC that 174 new cases of cholera were being investigated in the area around Arcahaie, a village in the northern Port-au-Prince district and about an hour's drive from the capital.

"These suspected cases are much nearer the capital," Ms Jacobs said late on Wednesday.

"So if this is actually confirmed as cholera as we suspect it will be, it means that the cholera has spread, it's that much nearer to the capital. And that's the thing we really need to avoid," she added.

So far a handful of cases have been reported in Port-au-Prince, but they were all people who had contracted the disease in other parts of the country.

"We really don't know about communities where diarrhoea cases are occurring but not reaching health centres” - Jon Kim Andrus PAHO

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Aiding flood victims in St. Lucia

(CARIBBEAT - Jared McCallister)

A benefit for flood victims of St. Lucia's Dennery Village, organized by St. Lucia House Foundation and showcasing St. Lucia's Kwéyòl culture, music, dance and cuisine, will be held Saturday at the St. Lucia House, 438 E. 49th St. (between Church and Snyder Aves.). Doors open at 7 p.m. and tickets are $10. Call (347) 715-6280 for information.

Haiti quake risk

(nypost.com)

CHICAGO -- Haiti could be facing another quake disaster, experts said yesterday.

As many as 300,000 people died in the January quake originally believed to have been caused by an undetected fault.

But the journal Nature Geoscience concludes the fault originally blamed for the quake was not the source, and a new threat remains.

Meanwhile, a cholera outbreak on the island has already killed 250 people and sickened more than 3,000.

Monday, October 25, 2010

OAS reviews Haiti’s readiness for elections

(caribbeanlifenews.com)

Key stakeholders at the Organization of American States (OAS) recently reviewed Haiti’s state of readiness for the Nov. 28, 2010 General Election.

Representatives of member states and permanent observers of the OAS participated in a meeting of the “Haiti Group of Friends,” in Washington DC recently.

OAS Secretary General Albert Ramdin informed the meeting of some of the challenges being faced by Haiti’s Office of National Identity (ONI) and Haitian citizens in the lead-up to the election.

Ramdin, who met a day earlier with the director of Haiti’s ONI, said the registration process was being challenged by limited resources, given the large amount of Haitian citizens trying to register to vote two months before the polls.

The secretary general indicated that Haitians were also concerned about the possibility of tropical storms ahead of the election, which would compromise the electoral process since thousands of Haitians are still living in tent cities.

“While the international community, for good reason, is focusing on the electoral process and the politics of the country, we must not forget that there are still millions of Haitians living in difficult circumstances,” he said.

“Those are not the best circumstances to have a population go into an electoral process and this is one of the concerns we should keep in mind for the next two months,” Ramdin added.

‘Heart of Haiti’ artisan gifts

(caribbeanlifenews.com)

Creating on-going sustainable jobs in Haiti is a herculean task and necessary for an economic base so that people can live humane lives. In spite of almost no tourism in the past decade compounded by the devastation of January’s earthquake, more than 240 artisans in Haiti are selling their goods and experiencing a steady income stream.

Fairwinds Trading’s founder Willa Shalit believes in trade not aid and had been invited by the Clinton Foundation to help jump start the artisan sector in Haiti.

“The creativity in Haiti is widely powerful,” says Shalit who linked up with Brandaid, an organization working with artisans in Haiti.

Now with Macy’s as a partner and outlet, a wider public will have access to buy vibrantly decorated papier-mache vases and painted trays from Jacmel, metal worked picture frames, fruit bowls, and pendants from Croix des Bouquets, and quilted potholders, oven mitts and cosmetic bags from Citi Soleil women quilters.

“For $10, people can own something from Haiti and it can help support artists there.” Shalit said, “You don’t have to be a foundation, everybody can help Haiti, own a piece and connect.”

Recently, Macy’s launched their International Gifting Centers in New York and Miami, a gift corner in the home décor departments. By the end of October, 25 Macy’s stores will carry the Heart of Haiti line plus ‘Rwanda Path to Peace’ items.

Designer J. went to Haiti in May, met with the artisans, and developed samples—a collaboration of the indigenous vision and craft techniques, and a retail market. “It is totally from the Haitian aesthetic,” Shalit commented, “We suggested shapes and sizes. It’s like bringing the market to the product, what may appeal to a greater audience.”

Shipping began in mid-August.

Jacmel, two hours south of Port-au-Prince, is known for its fabulous carnival with creative costumes and papier-mache masks, and was heavily damaged by the earthquake. The artisans, using their craft techniques, are making vases, bowls, and other decorative items. They work outside, storing their creations in tents--the earthquake destroyed their studios and homes. Shalit suggests that hopefully, with the money from these orders they can get out of their tents. Brandaid received a grant from Clinton Bush Foundation to help rebuild the workshops.

Well-known metal artist from Croix des Bouquets Serge Jolimeau whose beautifully crafted metal items are for sale and Sister Angela, who works with the women quilters in Citi Soleil, attended the Manhattan launch. Haitian diva Emeline Michel sang with her musicians. Haitians and friends of Haiti celebrated the launch and were spotted buying their favorite gift items. The accompanying website is: http://bit.ly/haitianartisans.

Opening in time for the holiday season, the Centers will continue as an on-going part of Macy’s. Fairwinds Trading is working on its spring line of items.

Shalit acknowledges that in times of crisis aid is necessary, but in countries where people live on just a few dollars a day, Fairwinds Trading helps establish a market for artisan products creating on-going income-producing jobs; she started with basket makers in Rwanda. Other partners in this sustainable business model of trade not aid are PQ2 Peacequilters and Gahaya Links.

Haiti, Jamaica at greater tsunami risk than previously thought

(latimes.com)

LOS ANGELES, USA (MCT) -- Haiti and Jamaica are at greater risk for destructive tsunamis than previously believed, according to a new study of tsunamis generated during the catastrophic Haiti earthquake in January.

The study, published online Sunday in the journal Nature Geoscience, raises troubling questions about the possibility of high death tolls should Jamaica be hit by a large earthquake, which could cause populated coastal areas to collapse into the Caribbean Sea and trigger tsunamis that would rebound back to shore.

John Orcutt, geophysics professor at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego, who was not involved in the study, said the report is a reminder that people on beaches or living near the coastline during a quake should be aware of the dangers of tsunamis.

After a quake, "If you live along the coastline, you want to be thinking about the potential tsunami hazard and get a couple hundred yards — a couple football fields up — just to make sure you're not going to be in an area that's inundated," Orcutt said.

He said even a 3-foot-high tsunami could bring in a wall of water moving at 40 mph. "It's nothing to mess with," he said. "It's like being hit by a car."

Costas Synolakis, director of the Tsunami Research Center at the University of Southern California, who also was not involved in the study, said coastal residents need to be better prepared. "The lesson here is, we really need to prepare for this," Synolakis said. "Even if they are rare events, they are high-impact events."

Matthew Hornbach, a research associate at the University of Texas Institute for Geophysics, said the study helps explain what was observed during the magnitude 7 or 8 earthquake that hit Port Royal in Jamaica in 1692, destroying the hub of British colonial interests in the Caribbean. Jamaica and Haiti both lie on top of the Enriquillo-Plantain Garden fault.

"During that event, a large chunk of Port Royal sunk into the ocean, and it also experienced a couple of tsunamis," Hornbach said. "It basically devastated the British Empire in the Caribbean for a while. ... A lot of people drowned," he said, some because their houses sank below sea level and others because tsunamis pushed walls of water inland.

"They found bodies floating in the water for days," Hornbach said.

Much of the city sank into the sea. The toll was placed at 2,000 dead, but authorities at the time did not include slaves in their count.

The study was conducted to explain a mystery that popped up after the Haiti earthquake: Why were there so many reports of tsunamis in a region that wasn't supposed to have many?

Hornbach said scientists had long expected tsunamis to occur from earthquakes generated from "subduction zones," in which one tectonic plate slides under another. Such earthquakes push up the seafloor, moving water up and resulting in tsunamis.

But the Haiti quake occurred on a fault where one plate pushes past the other and doesn't significantly push up the seafloor. Scientists had long believed those faults don't often cause tsunamis.

But what Hornbach's team found during a visit to Haiti in February and March was that the Jan. 12 quake caused the collapse of both coastal land and underwater sediment.

It was those landslides — both above and under water — that triggered tsunamis that rebounded onto sparsely populated coastal areas of Haiti, killing at least three people and wiping out several homes.

For example, near the town of Grand Goave, a chunk of shoreline the size of several football fields sank near where a tsunami roared ashore.

The study published Sunday was a collaboration of the University of Texas, the City University of New York, the U.S. Geological Survey, the University of Missouri, the Haitian Bureau of Mines and Energy, the Universite d'Etat de Haiti and the University of California, Santa Barbara.

Friday, October 22, 2010

Haiti confirms scores of deaths due to cholera outbreak


(bbc.co.uk)

Hundreds of people received treatment in the car park of a hospital in Saint-Marc

Haiti's president and medical officials have confirmed that an outbreak of cholera has killed scores of people north of the capital Port-au-Prince.

The victims suffered diarrhoea, acute fever and vomiting. More than 1,500 people were infected, officials said.

President Rene Preval said his government was taking steps to ensure the disease did not spread further.

There are fears the outbreak could reach the camps around the capital for survivors of January's earthquake.

The quake killed some 250,000 people and left 1.5 million homeless. Tens of thousands of people are still living in crowded tent cities with poor sanitation and little access to clean drinking water.

Cholera is an intestinal infection caused by bacteria transmitted through contaminated water or food. The source of contamination is usually the faeces of infected people.

It causes diarrhoea and vomiting, leading to severe dehydration, and can kill quickly if left untreated. It is easily treated though rehydration and antibiotics, however.

Hospitals 'overwhelmed'

"I can confirm it is cholera," President Preval told Reuters news agency.

"Now we are making sure people are fully aware of precautionary measures they have to take to prevent contamination"

The director general of the health department, Dr Gabriel Thimote, said the worst-affected areas were Douin, Marchand Dessalines and areas around Saint-Marc, about 100km (60 miles) north of Port-au-Prince.

Local hospitals were "overwhelmed", and a number of people were being evacuated to clinics in other areas, he added.

At one point on Thursday, hundreds of people were laid out in the car park of St Nicholas hospital in Saint-Marc, with intravenous drips in their arms to treat dehydration, until it began to rain and they were rushed inside.

Some patients said they drank water from a public canal, while others said they bought purified water.

"I ran to the bathroom four times last night vomiting," 70-year-old Belismene Jean Baptiste told the Associated Press.

Another man said three of his relatives had died within a matter hours.

The victims range in age, but the young and the elderly appear to be the worst-affected.

David Darg, a medical relief worker in Haiti, told the BBC he had visited an area near Saint-Marc which - according to local residents - was the source of the outbreak.

"After visiting the hospital and meeting some of the medical staff, they were able to pinpoint where these cases were originating from so we headed out to a very rural area," Mr Darg told the BBC's World Today programme.

"There's a lot of water in that area particularly," added Mr Darg. "We started heading out along narrow roads lined with villagers begging for water, because by now they'd been seeing people dying in their communities and knew not to drink water from the river, which ordinarily would have been their main source of water: they drink water straight from the river."

There were fears of a cholera outbreak in the aftermath of January's earthquake, but none emerged.

This is the first time in a century that cholera has struck the Caribbean nation, the World Health Organization said.

The Artibonite department was not badly damaged in the earthquake but thousands of people who lost their homes have moved into camps or are living with relatives there.

"We have been afraid of this since the earthquake," said Robin Mahfood, president of Food for the Poor.

The agency was preparing to airlift donations of antibiotics, oral dehydration salts and other supplies to the affected areas.

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HOW TO HELP:

- Terrence J. Terrence (host of 106th & Park) has teamed up with an organization called Project Medishare that has been providing medical care in Haiti for 16 years. Please text SAVE to 501501 to donate $5. 100% of the money will go towards buying supplies to fight this cholera epidemic. This is our chance to make a difference, to do our part, and to save lives.

Monday, October 18, 2010

3 Inmates Killed In Botched Haiti Prison Escape

(miamiherald.com)
PORT-AU-PRINCE -- United Nations troops and Haitian National Police officers restored a sense of order to downtown Port-au-Prince Sunday afternoon after three prisoners were killed in a botched jail break.

(heraldsun.com.au)
"They tried to get out and were killed," Haitian National Police spokesman Frantz Lerebours told the Miami Herald.

Residents near the national penitentiary, in downtown Port-au-Prince, reported that gunshots were heard at the facility about 10am local time.

Haitian police said the three prisoners overpowered several guards and stripped them of their weapons - three shotguns and an M-14 rifle - but were killed before they made good on their escape bid.

By mid-afternoon, dozens of UN troops and riot police officers blocked off the street leading to the prison's entrance, the Herald reported.

In the chaos after Haiti's devastating earthquake on January 12, thousands of prisoners escaped from the jail, with today's incident continuing a long saga of unrest at the facility.

Saturday, October 9, 2010

October 10, 2010

Today is 10, 10, 10...

...Mayan Elders visited the United Nations on Friday to calm the public's fear about "2012 Doomsday". If you are interested in reading more about it CLICK HERE.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Wyclef Hospitalized For Stress

(nationalledger.com)

Wyclef Jean has been hospitalized with stress and fatigue. The former Fugees singer was forced to abandon his bid to become President of Haiti last week, and was admitted to a hospital in New Jersey on Sunday (09-26-10) due to his exhaustion.

A statement released by his family read: "Wyclef Jean has had an extremely grueling three months - truly an exhausting eight months, since the earthquake when he recommitted himself to our homeland and his passion for our people. He is currently suffering the effects of lack of sleep and stress, global travel, even the endless public eye, and has asked that his fans and supporters bear with him for the next several days as he regains his physical health and stamina. Then he will be back out in front of the crusade to rebuild Haiti and his pledge to make it even better for business."

Wyclef's representative, Marian Salzman confirmed he was in hospital, but said he expects the 'Gone 'Til November' singer to be released this week and that he "plans to take it easy" afterward.

Wyclef's bid to become president in November's elections was rejected, and although reasons were not given, it is thought he does not meet constitutional requirements for candidacy - which include owning property in Haiti, always having held a Haitian passport, and having lived in the country for five consecutive years.

The 37-year-old musician only fulfilled this last requirement on a technicality, having lived in the country until he was nine.

Wyclef has played a very active role in the relief effort in the country since its capital, Port Au Prince, was hit by a massive earthquake in January leaving an estimated 230,000 people dead, 300,000 injured and over 1 million homeless.

Saturday, October 2, 2010

Tiger Style

This is my entry for the 'Urban Shogun' Draw-Off Art Contest 2010.
Had to do this one 'Calvin & Hobbes' style!