TwistedSifter

Every Wednesday, the Sifter posts top-line summaries to current events around the globe. all news articles are from Reuters, The new York Times and BBC News.Haiti cholera reaches Dominican Republic [BBC News]
- The Dominican Republic has detected its first case of cholera, following the outbreak of the disease in neighbouring Haiti last month. The patient is a Haitian migrant who had recently returned from his homeland, the health minister said- more than 1,000 Haitians have died of the disease. Dominican health minister Bautista Rojas said the patient, a 32-year-old Haitian construction worker, was being treated in isolation in the eastern town of Higuey. Like Haiti, the Dominican Republic had not had a confirmed case of cholera in more than a century until this year- The epidemic has provoked fear and anger in Haiti. The country was already struggling to recover from a devastating earthquake in January which killed about 230,000 people in and around the capital Port-au-Prince and shattered its already poor infrastructure. on Monday two people died during violent protests against UN peacekeepers, whom some Haitians accuse of bringing cholera into Haiti
Bout extradition: Russia criticises US pressure [BBC News]
- Russia has described as a “blatant injustice” Thailand’s decision to extradite alleged Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout to the US to face charges of conspiring to sell weapons. he was arrested in Bangkok in 2008 in a US-led operation. The former Russian air force officer, 43, has been accused of trying to sell arms to Colombian rebels, and supplying weapons that fuelled conflicts in Africa and the Middle East- The 43-year-old is thought to have knowledge of Russia’s military and intelligence operations, and Russian diplomats fear the revelations he might make in open court. Dubbed the Merchant of Death by a British politician, he was alleged to have supplied arms to Angola, Liberia and the Democratic Republic of Congo- he is also suspected of having used his network of air freight companies to supply weapons, in the early 1990s, to Afghanistan and Bosnia. If convicted, he faces a maximum penalty of life in prison. But he denies being, or ever having been, an arms dealer – and Moscow also insists he is innocent
Analysis: Image triumphs, economic failures for Obama in Asia [Reuters]
- Obama heads home on Sunday from his trip to India, Indonesia and economic summits in South Korea and Japan after public relations triumphs on his first stops, but disappointments on the economic issues that were the primary focus of the trip- Foreign leaders stood up to Obama at the G20 summit in Seoul, refusing to back Washington’s desire for hard targets to support its push for balanced global growth and pressure on China to move to a market-driven exchange rate. In an embarrassing setback for both Obama and South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, U.S. and South Korean negotiators failed to reach an agreement on their stalled free trade pact, after Obama had pledged to have a deal in time for his visit- The Democratic president left for Asia just three days after his party suffered big defeats in mid-term elections at the hands of voters worried over the sputtering U.S. economy and unemployment stuck near 10 percent for more than a year. The trip was intended to counteract that frustration with a stress on opening new markets for American goods and improving the jobs picture, so the timing was especially tough
China’s C919 passenger jet wins first orders [BBC News]
- A breakthrough first order has been made for 100 Chinese-made jetliners. Commercial Aircraft Corp of China (Comac) has taken its first orders for the C919 passenger planes from three domestic airlines and General Electric’s leasing arm. The orders are being seen as a vote of confidence in state-owned Comac- The move may also mark a challenge to the dominance of Boeing and Airbus who have virtual control of the trillion dollar aircraft industry. Comac expects to sell more than 2,000 C919s over the next 20 years. China is the world’s fastest growing major economy and its domestic air travel market is set to expand rapidly over the next decade. A billion Chinese are predicted to be flying for business and leisure in the near future and China is keen to reduce its reliance on foreign planes- The model, which has 166 seats competes with Boeing’s 737 and the Airbus A320. According to estimates by Boeing, this segment of the market could be worth $1.7trillion over the next 20 years. Comac expects to start building the aircraft next year, followed by a maiden flight in 2014 with first delivery in 2016
Myanmar people overjoyed but worry about Suu Kyi [Reuters]
- The release of pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi is still being celebrated in Myanmar but fears about her safety or re-arrest are running high among her adoring supporters. The Nobel laureate and daughter of the country’s independence hero was released on Saturday after seven years in detention but many are concerned her freedom could be short-lived if the country’s oppressive army rulers decide to wield their power- In a country where distrust of the military runs deep, her supporters would have every reason to be concerned. Suu Kyi’s motorcade was attacked in May 2003 by pro-junta thugs in the town of Depayin while on a countryside tour. she was placed back under house arrest, which the regime called “protective custody.”- Suu Kyi spent 15 of the past 21 years in detention because of her fight against military dictatorship in Myanmar. she already appears on a collision course with the generals, using her first major speech on Sunday to call for freedom of speech in a country where all media are strictly monitored by censors and urging supporters to stand up for their rights. In an interview with the BBC that aired on Monday, she called for a “peaceful revolution” in the country of 50 million people
Global spam e-mail drops after hacker arrests [BBC News]
- Levels of spam have fallen by almost 50% since August 2010, suggest figures. Figures compiled by security firm Symantec show that the amount of junk e-mail messages flowing around the net has dropped 47% in three months. Kaspersky Labs noted a similar fall from July to September, when spam levels fell to 81.1% of all e-mails- The decline was put down to the arrests of those behind spam-sending botnets, and intelligence work that saw other spamming systems shut down. In the last few months security firms have scored several notable successes against gangs that own and operate botnets – collections of hijacked home computers. The vast majority of spam or junk mail is routed through these hijacked machines- One of the biggest successes was against the Pushdo or Cutwail botnet, which had been in operation since 2007 and was thought to be sending about 10% of global spam. Bredolab was another big botnet hit in October. At its height Bredolab was thought to involve up to 30 million computers around the world and be capable of sending 3.6 billion e-mails every day
Upsized GM IPO could be biggest deal ever [Reuters]
- General Motors Co GM.UL is boosting the size of its common stock offering by more than 30 percent to $15.5 billion, two people familiar with the matter said, potentially making its landmark IPO the largest U.S. offering ever. The expansion comes in response to surging demand from investors, who had put in orders worth $70 billion for GM’s common shares by late on Tuesday- GM’s initial public offering, which will reduce the U.S. Treasury to a minority shareholder in the top U.S. automaker, could raise nearly $23 billion if underwriters exercise the full overallotment option on both common and preferred shares. The deal could also pay back over $15 billion to the U.S. government, assuming that shares price at the high end of the range and all of the common stock on offer is sold- That would take the Obama administration closer to break-even on a still controversial bailout that some critics had predicted would be a financial quagmire for taxpayers. The largest U.S. IPO to date was Visa Inc’s (V.N) $19.7 billion stock sale in 2008. The increased size of the GM IPO reflects renewed confidence in the outlook for the world’s no. 2 automaker less than a year and a half after dwindling cash and falling sales pushed it into a bankruptcy funded by the U.S. Treasury
BHP kills Potash Corp bid, revives $4.2 billion buyback [Reuters]
- BHP Billiton scrapped its $39 billion bid for Canada’s Potash Corp and bowed to calls from investors to return cash, a move that came days after regulators blocked the year’s biggest takeover deal. BHP, conceding defeat for the third straight time on a major proposed merger or acquisition, signaled with its revived $4.2 billion share buyback that it had limited opportunities for other big buys- Canada blocked BHP’s hostile bid for the world’s largest fertilizer maker on November 3 and gave BHP a month to prove the takeover would benefit Canada. “Unfortunately, despite having received all required antitrust clearances for the offer, we have not been able to obtain clearance under the Investment Canada Act and have accordingly decided to withdraw the offer,” BHP Chief Executive Marius Kloppers said in a statement- It will be tough for the world’s largest miner to chase other major buys, given its size and dominance in most of its markets. Analysts said BHP may look at takeovers in the petroleum sector since it is only a mid-sized player in that industry and would be less likely to run into competition hurdles
Facebook takes on Google and Yahoo in Web messages [Reuters]
- Facebook rolled out an all-in-one messaging service that for the first time allows its half-billion members to communicate with people outside the social network, intensifying a battle with Google Inc and Yahoo Inc for users’ Internet time- The new feature — to be rolled out over coming months — lets users send and receive instant and text messages in addition to standard email and Facebook notes. “This is not an email killer. This is a messaging system that includes email as one part of it,” Zuckerberg told reporters at the St. Regis hotel in San Francisco- Analysts say that email users are particularly valuable to Web portals like Yahoo, which seek to funnel the traffic into their other online services. Facebook and Google’s intensifying rivalry is expected to play a crucial role in shaping the future of the Internet. The industry is closely watching their pitched struggle for Web surfers’ time online, advertising dollars, and increasingly costly Silicon Valley talent
Photograph by REUTERS/Mohammed SalemMuslim pilgrims circle the Kaaba at the center of the Grand mosque in Mecca during the annual Hajj pilgrimage November 11, 2010.via The big Picture: Haji 2010 If you’re on Twitter or Facebook, let’s connect!


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OPINION: Haiti Reminds Us Of The Poverty At Home
It is unfortunate that it took an earthquake to put the spotlight back on poverty in Haiti. To be sure, the 7.0 magnitude earthquake that leveled Port-au-Prince would have been devastating under any circumstances. but the people of Haiti have been suffering for years. the difference is that no one cared: people often become weary hearing about black people suffering.
The hopeless level of poverty in Haiti has been longstanding. And as the oldest black republic in the Western hemisphere, this island nation has been suffering for a long time to suffer. Haiti never had a chance to develop a thriving middle class. Exploited and neglected, the country was occupied by the United States. Uncle Sam propped up its corrupt, banana republic dictators, and supported its ruthless death squads. And as recently as 2004, the U.S. apparently participated in a coup that removed Haiti’s then democratically-elected president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, from power. a neglected stepchild, Haiti has not fared well in America’s racist immigration policy, with the separate and unequal treatment of Haitian and Cuban refugees. Haitians fought with the colonists in the American Revolution, but America never repaid the favor.
Natural disasters shed light on the disaster of poverty. such is also the case with new Orleans, another of America’s neglected stepchildren. for years, that city served as America’s playground. but when Hurricane Katrina hit, people around the world were exposed to images of the African-American citizens of new Orleans — poverty-stricken, disenfranchised, disregarded, and left to fend for themselves.
Haiti and new Orleans have a great deal in common, including cultural ties. After all, historically, Haitian immigrants helped to build new Orleans. but they have more in common than that. both are the victims of policies that callously ignored them, and failed to deal with the consequences of intractable poverty. Americans glued to the TV screen are witnessing the horrific images of human suffering amidst the rubble in Port-au-Prince, and the deprivation made only worse by the rubble of the earthquake. And they are touched and they want to help, and rightly so. Without doubt, whether they are moved or not, many Americans believe that they are far removed from the poverty they witnessed in Port-au-prince, or the lower Ninth Ward of new Orleans for that matter. Yet, they are mistaken.
America ranks 30th in the world in infant mortality. the infant mortality rate in some parts of the U.S., and among some groups such as African Americans, is as high as some third World nations. Further, childhood poverty is at 20 percent. One in eight Americans, and one of every four children in America depends on food stamps. about half of American children, and 90 percent of black children, will live in a household that depends on food stamps at some point before they turn 20. And 63 percent of teachers buy food for hungry students with their own money.
The great Recession — combined with years of regressive economic policies that favored the wealthy and corporations — is resulting in the erosion of the middle class, as more people are plunging into poverty and homelessness. the mortgage and foreclosure crisis is responsible for an unprecedented evaporation of wealth, particularly in the black and Latino communities.
According to a new report from United for a Fair Economy, unemployment rates among people of color are the highest in 27 years. bad economic times have widened the racial wealth and income disparities. African-Americans and Latinos are nearly three times as likely to live in poverty as whites. And while blacks earn 62 cents for every dollar of white income, Latinos earn 68 cents for every white dollar.
The report also notes that around 3.4 million families experienced a foreclosure in 2009. Initially driven by costly subprime lending (which comprised over half of the mortgages to black folks in recent years), nearly 60 percent of mortgage defaults last year were due to unemployment. “the Obama Administration missed opportunities in 2009 to stop foreclosures, stabilize the economy, and start rebuilding wealth in the communities that the predatory mortgage industry targeted,” according to the report.
And poverty in America, like poverty in Haiti or anywhere for that matter, will only exacerbate unless decisive action is taken now. when we decry the sorry state of human existence in other nations, we must also acknowledge the deplorable conditions of people in our own midst and within our own so-called “land of plenty.” And we must understand the ways in which poverty in Port-au-Prince is related to poverty in new Orleans, or Detroit, or Philadelphia.
As the effort to rebuild Haiti begins, there is now talk in the international financial community of forgiving Haiti’s $1 billion debt. That is a good thing. but we should not wait for a catastrophe to deal with issues of poverty, economic inequality and justice. we must deal with the silent catastrophe that is occurring right before our very eyes.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member David a. love, JD is a journalist and human rights advocate based in Philadelphia, and a contributor to the Huffington Post, theGrio, the Progressive Media Project and McClatchy-Tribune News Service, among others. he contributed to the book, States of Confinement: Policing, Detention, and Prisons (St. Martin’s Press, 2000). love is a former Amnesty International UK spokesperson. His blog is davidalove.com.
OPINION: Haiti Reminds Us Of The Poverty At Home
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Rising From the Rubble
Close to nine months after the earthquake that killed more than 200,000 in Haiti, the city of Port-au-Prince is still in ruins. Reconstruction has been slow, and more than a million people remain homeless. Yet the country’s artists—those on the island as well as their counterparts abroad—are using their limited resources to channel the nation’s suffering, hope, and anxiety into new paintings, crafts, and sculptures.
In the process, they have created a market for post-earthquake Haitian art, particularly in the United States. Recently, the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., opened an exhibit of post-earthquake paintings and drawings by Haitian children. In September, Macy’s partnered with Haitian artists on a new line of home-décor handcrafts, Smithsonian magazine commissioned a painting by Zephirin for its cover last month, and the Miami International Airport opened an exhibit featuring works created by Haitian artists in the wake of the disaster. The 4,000-square-foot gallery features voodoo flags made with beads and sequins, intricate metal carvings made from flattened oil drums, and carnival masks made from papier-mâché. “This exhibition is a testament to their optimism,” said Yolanda Sanchez, the airport’s fine-arts director.
That optimism—long a cornerstone of Haitian art—has helped the country survive its difficult history. More than 200 years ago, Haiti was created in the aftermath of a massive slave uprising against the French. Since then, the nation has suffered a host of indignities: invasion, isolation, and poor self-governance. Yet out of this misery has grown a rich artistic tradition that draws heavily on African, Taíno, voodoo, and Catholic influences. “Haiti doesn’t have car factories. it doesn’t have steel plants,” says Richard Kurin, the undersecretary for history, art, and culture at the Smithsonian. “Culture is one of the few resources Haitians have. Art has become a way for them to preserve their dignity.”
Art has also provided a way for Haitians to reckon with tragedy. Since the quake, various relief groups and nongovernmental organizations have set up dozens of art-therapy camps for children and adults in Port-au-Prince and other nearby areas. “We use art as a meditation,” says Mazen Aboulhosn, a psychologist for the International Organization for Migration. “It’s easier to talk about difficulties through…art…than talking directly,” says Patricia Landinez, a psychologist for the United Nations Children’s Fund.
Those difficulties are evident in Zephirin’s work. In the piece commissioned by the Smithsonian entitled And Haiti will Bloom again, the artist paints the island as a dark mass filled with crosses. In the clouds, a watchful eye is crying. Yet there is also a sense of hope; in the center of the painting, large, colorful birds deliver flowers, money, and justice to the island in their beaks.
A sense of hope also permeates Eight Days, a children’s book by the Haitian-American writer Edwidge Danticat and illustrated by Alix Delinois. Danticat wrote the story to explain to her 5-year-old daughter what happened during the earthquake. Published in September, the book follows a young boy named Junior who spends more than a week beneath the rubble. to quell his fears, Junior imagines the good parts of life on the island: singing loudly in church, playing hide-and-seek with his friends, and catching mouthfuls of rain during a storm. then, miraculously, he is rescued. throughout the story, Delinois’s bright, colorful drawings mirror Danticat’s message of hope and resilience. “After a tragedy, we’re always trying to get a sense of who we are,” says Danticat. “Art is proof that we’re alive beyond breathing.”
For André Eugène, an artist known for making macabre sculptures from wood, scrap metal, and skulls, the earthquake has given him new inspiration. “I find myself making sculptures of pregnant women,” he says. “I’ve started to create art about giving life.”
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Haiti: 'Disaster capitalism on steroids' | San Francisco Bay View
by Johnny Van Hove
“Two months after the devastating earthquake, the situation in Haiti is downright criminal,” says Robert Roth. according to the spokesperson for the activist network Haiti Action Committee, major Western players such as the U.S. are more interested in defending their own geopolitical interests in Haiti than truly helping the hard hit Caribbean country.
Johnny Van Hove: Haiti has disappeared almost completely from the front pages. Since you are in close contact with a number of Haitian grassroots organizations via the Haiti Action Committee, could you describe how the situation down there is at the moment?
Robert Roth: the situation is a catastrophe. at this point about 230,000 people have died and 3,000,000 people are still left homeless. Hundreds of thousands of people have no shelter whatsoever and are literally sleeping outside. under sheets, not in tents. in many, many areas there is no water, no tents, no healthcare. One to 2 million people are in internal refugee camps that are now dotting Port au Prince. They were set up by international aid agencies, but they are in terrible shape.
The lack of housing is truly astounding. We have been getting numerous requests from the poorest communities in Haiti for funds for tents. With the rainy season coming, there is a very grave danger of the spread of typhoid, measles and dysentery. It could be one of these situations in which the aftermath of a disaster is even worse than the disaster itself. the situation was and is truly criminal.
JVH: considering the hundreds of international aid organizations working in Haiti, how could it have come to this situation?
RR: the total amount of financial support that has gone through aid groups is close to $1 billion. Haiti is truly flooded with aid organizations and yet very few aid goods have been distributed. Most goods have been sitting at the airport or in big warehouses. People who were pulled out from under the rubble by Haitians could not receive medical aid because it was not distributed efficiently.
You have to distinguish among the aid groups, of course. two groups which have been very consistent in distributing aid goods are Partners in Health and Doctors Without Borders. On the other hand, the Red Cross has been mostly invisible in the poorest communities in Haiti.
There have been protests directly at the Red Cross warehouses and offices, demanding that the aid be distributed. the effectiveness of a number of the aid agencies has been astonishingly weak. and when a country has been occupied, when its democratic organizations have been repressed, and when community-based organizations are marginalized, earthquake relief just will not immediately get into the hands of the people.
JVH: What is the role of the U.N. and the U.S. – which have been major players in Haitian history – in the current catastrophe?
RR: the U.N. and the U.S. have looked at their role as a security measure. their concept of aid has been militarized, which means that they have not been diligent in handing out aid to communities. the U.S. military has 11,000 soldiers down there, the U.N. 9,000.
Six thousand U.N. troops have been there since the coup against the democratically elected President Aristide in 2004 and they have been a repressive force, an occupying army in Haiti. in the wake of the earthquake, the U.S. and U.N. armies have been essentially patrolling Haiti.
I am not saying that there has been no help. They have started to distribute food, tents, health supplies. But it has been much more limited than you would expect. There have been many reports from various communities about how armed vehicles just drove by their communities without helping them.
JVH: What were the effects of the “militarization” of the relief aid by the U.S., amongst other countries – Canada and Japan sent hundreds of troops too, for instance? the American-Haitian activist Marguerite Laurent suggested on her blog that humanitarian aid was blocked in favor of military equipment after the U.S. took over the Haitian airports in the first few days after the earthquake.
RR: the militarization of the relief aid really delayed the distribution of food, water and particularly medical aid. One of the effects was that in the first few days after the earthquake, five cargo planes of Doctors Without Borders were turned away and rerouted to the Dominican Republic. Partners in Health estimated that about 20,000 people died each day that aid was delayed.
JVH: Is the lack of security in Haiti an explanation for the heavy emphasis on sending in forces? Numerous media reports after the earthquake suggested that insecurity, rapes and violence erupting during foreign aid handouts were mounting.
RR: the images of insecurity in the media are not accurate at all. There are always security issues in any country. But what is remarkable is the discipline, the non-violence, the resilience, the creativity and the cooperation that Haitians have exhibited in the face of this catastrophe. even days and days and days after not receiving aid, the U.S. and U.N. could not point to any major security issues.
JVH: If Haiti has not been as insecure as hinted at in the media, how can the massive military response of the U.S. be explained?
RR: the primary fear of the U.S. was popular political unrest. Haiti truly has a very politically conscious population which has never gone down easily. after the coup in 2004, thousands of people were killed and thousands more imprisoned and held without charges. Every member of the Lavalas government – from high level ministers to local officials – were removed from office. others were forced into exile.
Still, there has never been an end to grassroots organizing. Labor unions protested the price of gas and the privatizing of the phone company. There were major demonstrations demanding Aristide’s return. just recently, there was a very successful electoral boycott because the Haitian government denied Lavalas the right to participate in the election, even though it is the most popular political party in Haiti.
The U.S. is still not comfortable with the popular movement in Haiti. you can see this in the continued banishment of former President Aristide from Haiti. while the Obama administration has called on former Presidents Clinton and Bush – who was responsible for the 2004 coup – to help coordinate aid, it opposes the return of a former democratically elected president who wants to return as a private citizen to aid in the reconstruction efforts.
JVH: Surely, there must be other reasons to justify the militarization of the aid relief?
RR: There is clearly a major geopolitical and economic interest in Haiti, most prominently by the U.S. There is a long history of U.S. intervention in the area, including a direct U.S. occupation from 1915-1934. This occupation created the Haitian military and led eventually to the Duvalier dictatorships. in 1991, the U.S. overthrew Aristide and then again in 2004. So the U.S. is clearly opposed to the social program of Lavalas and to its example in the Caribbean.
Haiti is also strategically located close to both Cuba and Venezuela. Haiti is rich in minerals, such as marble, uranium, iridium and oil. Big corporations, such as the Royal Caribbean Lines, are creating a tourist center in the north which could have an enormous value for the tourist industry in the Caribbean area.
And Haiti is looked at as a source of cheap labor. There is a long history of garment assembly in Haiti. Cherokee, Wal-Mart, Disney and Major League Baseball all had relationships with Haiti. If the U.S. plan for Haiti is implemented, the numbers of sweatshops in Port au Prince will surely increase.
JVH: Naomi Klein suggested that “disaster capitalism” is striking in Haiti. Would you agree?
RR: Absolutely. This is disaster capitalism on steroids. Number one, you have had an earthquake that ravaged the infrastructure of a country which has been made poor over the centuries. secondly, you have more than 20,000 troops and massive amounts of capital circulating there. plus, the Haitian government has been a very passive partner in the aftermath of the earthquake. that is a perfect recipe.
The reconstruction conferences in Montreal and Miami are indicating that Haiti will be rebuilt along the lines of the organizations attending them: the U.S., Canada, the World Bank, the Clinton Foundation, the IMF, major business corporations such as the Royal Caribbean Lines, the Soros Foundation. Haiti is like a blank board in their minds. It is going be a feeding frenzy soon.
JVH: the Haitian government was attending the reconstruction meetings too, though. What is its role in the current crisis?
RR: What was remarkable throughout the crisis was the invisibility of the government. There are two reasons for that. First of all, the government really seems to have lost its connection to the Haitian people. President Preval has been major disappointment since he was elected in 2006. He has basically been an arm of the occupation forces of the U.N.
Secondly, the government of Haiti has been starved for years and years by the international lending organizations, including USAID. even now, the government does not receive true support. It literally gets only one cent for every dollar spent on Haiti.
That really creates a dependency on international aid agencies. when a crisis such as this happens, the government is underfunded and the aid agencies take over. All in all, the invisibility and compliance of the Haitian government is a token for the fact that the U.S., the U.N. and the NGOs have taken control of the country.
JVH: Since the relief agencies are not performing efficiently, who has been providing aid at the grassroots level in Haiti?
RR: What is happening in Haiti is that local communities are helping themselves. the mainstream image of Haitians is that they cannot help themselves, that they are dysfunctional and violent. the truth could not be more different.
Haiti is a very well organized country at the grassroots level. There are community committees in every one of the poor neighborhoods, which have been organizing protests in order to get the aid goods distributed. They have also been contacting international organizations they know they can trust and started distributing the aid goods to their local communities.
An organization which has been very important is the Aristide Foundation, which has been setting up aid programs, especially in the refugee camps. They have created mobile schools, they have developed local health clinics, and they are also setting up a big health center at the foundation’s site. Partners in Health has continued to provide important support as well. and our organization is funding community projects that are not getting aided by the big relief organizations.
JVH: according to Marguerite Laurent in the current issue of the American magazine the Progressive, the people that could be saved were saved mostly by Haitians “frantically using their bare hands to dig through the rubble and lift pulverized concrete in the immediate 48 hours after the earthquake.” does that give an accurate image of how the digging and rescuing took place?
RR: Laurent is absolutely right. the chair of the Haiti Emergency Relief Fund, for instance, was in Haiti with his family at the time of the quake, and they saw first hand how Haitians were working day and night to save their families and friends. that was basically the story in Haiti: Haitians saving themselves and bandaging and housing each other. They waited for aid that never came and that is why so many people have died unnecessarily.
JVH: Nevertheless, Haiti cannot rebuild itself without external help. the Haitian Diaspora will keep on sending close to a billion dollars to their homeland every year. But what role can international aid agencies play? who should be supported in order to help Haiti?
RR: you can’t talk about disaster capitalism and then donate to the big NGOs. If you donate to the Red Cross, for instance, some help will go to Haiti. at the same time, you are also donating to a system which is not designed to empower Haitians. So if you are progressive, if you want democracy in Haiti, and if you have some faith in the Haitian people, you should be looking for the groups most closely related to, and working with, the grassroots organizations.
This interview by Johnny Van Hove with Robert Roth was first published in DeWereldMorgen and by the Collegium for African American Research on March 9, 2010. Van Hove is website editor for CAAR. Robert Roth is co-founder, with Pierre Labossiere, of the Haiti Action Committee, www.haitiaction.net and www.haitisolidarity.net.
Haiti: 'Disaster capitalism on steroids' | San Francisco Bay View
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Categories: News and Events Tags: caribbean country, close contact, devastating earthquake, grassroots organizations, port au prince, tents
Digicel and Leading Mobile Phone Manufacturers Donate 50000 Phones to Support …
PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti – Digicel, the largest mobile operator in the Caribbean and fastest growing operator in Central America and the Pacific, has come together with a number of leading mobile phone manufacturers to distribute over 50,000 handsets and credit worth more than US$2 million to a variety of non-Government and non-profit organisations in Haiti.
Thanks to the generosity of handset manufacturers LG, Alcatel, Nokia, Samsung, RIM, ZTE and SIM card supplier Gemalto, over 30,000 phones have already been distributed to over 150 organisations by Digicel. these include the International Organization for Migration (IOM) which assists in the management of camp sites housing displaced Haitians, WorldVision, Save the Children, Concern, Fonkoze, UNICEF, Partners in Health, Catholic Relief Services and Mdecins Sans Frontires, to name but a few. Earthquake researchers, mobile health clinics and sanitation and shelter specialists have also received handsets and credit — as well as hospital and orphanage staff.
Digicel Group CEO, Colm Delves, said: “Since the magnitude 7.0 earthquake struck Haiti four months ago, a massive relief effort has been underway to support the people of Haiti. Thousands of volunteers from around the world have been working around the clock with a number of NGOs, and non-profit organisations. Given the sheer scale of the project to rebuild Haiti, being able to stay in touch with colleagues, as well as friends and family abroad, is vitally important.
“I would like to say thank you to our major handset suppliers for coming out to support us in our efforts to ensure that those who are working tirelessly to rebuild Haiti continue to enjoy the reliable communications which are critical to their work,” he continued.
Director of World Vision in Haiti, Franck Williams, said: “We are very grateful to Digicel and to the mobile phone manufacturers for this fantastic donation. With widespread infrastructure in Haiti still poor, and an influx in the number of aid workers, having reliable and efficient mobile communications is critical to the ongoing relief efforts ensuring that we can keep in contact with each other — and our counterparts — across the country.”
Since the earthquake, Digicel has sent over 90,000lbs of provisions and 21,000lbs of medical supplies and antibiotics to help those whose lives have been devastated by the earthquake.
As the single largest investor in Haiti with a total investment of over US$370 million since its launch in 2006, Digicel has over two million customers in Haiti. The Digicel Haiti Relief Fund has donated US$5 million to NGOs in Haiti to support the relief efforts and to date over US$800,000 has been raised by Digicel customers across the Caribbean and Central America through a text and voice donation line. Digicel also gave each of its two million customers US$5 in free credit — totaling US$10 million.
Digicel and Leading Mobile Phone Manufacturers Donate 50000 Phones to Support …
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