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Images from a Hurricane Worn Haiti and Another Way to Help

8:41 am By Maegan La Mala · Haiti

18 Sep 2008

Juan Fach has some distur fotos from Gonaives, Haiti, one the areas most impacted of the worst impacted areas in the country.

The images reveal that more help is needed.

An Urgent Appeal From the Haiti Emergency Relief Fund:
Haitian Grassroots Organizations Need Your Support

As tropical storms continue to ravage Haiti, hundreds have been killed and hundreds of thousands left homeless. This is a moment in which your solidarity is of critical importance.

Haiti’s grassroots movement including labor unions, women’s groups,
educators and human rights activists, support committees for prisoners, and agricultural cooperatives is attempting to funnel needed aid to those most hit by the hurricanes. Where the Haitian government and the UN occupying forces have failed to provide the needed resources, grassroots organizers are doing what they can with the most limited of funds to make a difference. Please take this chance to lend them your support.

For the last two years, we have heard from the international mainstream
press that Haiti was moving slowly towards democratic government, security and economic progress. Supposedly, the United Nations occupation and the 2006 election of President Rene Preval had allowed Haitians to move on, to somehow forget that its democratically elected president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, had been overthrown in a violent coup in which thousands had been killed, displaced, imprisoned and exiled. Supposedly, a brighter day had dawned in Haiti.

The United Nations occupation forces have a budget of over $535 million this year, and the Preval government has received international aid denied to the former government of President Aristide. Even with these resources, the authorities have not come close to reinstating the disaster relief programs that had been in place under Aristide. In addition, economic conditions for
the average Haitian have deteriorated rapidly. Prices for rice, beans,
water, cooking oil and gas have skyrocketed to the point where many Haitians simply cannot afford to eat.

Now the hurricanes and the totally inadequate response from the United
States, the United Nations and the Haitian government have created an even more desperate situation. Local community activists have taken it upon themselves to travel to villages and towns hit hard by the storms. Over and over again, they have found communities where no aid has been seen, where no help has been given, where countless homes have been destroyed and where people are starving.

This is a time for all of us to act.

What Can You Do?
Since its inception in March 2004, the Haiti Emergency Relief Fund has given concrete aid to Haiti’s grassroots democratic movement as they attempted to survive the brutal coup and to rebuild shattered development projects. We urge you to contribute generously, not only for this immediate crisis, but in order to support the long-run development of human rights, sustainable agriculture and economic justice in Haiti.

During this period, if you or anyone you know are planning to make a
donation to assist those in need, please consider the Haiti Emergency Relief Fund/Vanguard.

A description of what HERF does on a regular basis can be found at the
following links:

http://www.haitisolidarity.net/article.php?id=238 and
http://www.haitiaction.net/About/HERF/HERF.html (with Paypal info)

Donations will be forwarded to our partners on the ground to help them
rebuild what has been destroyed. Checks can be made out to Haiti Emergency
Relief Fund/Vanguard and mailed to:

Vanguard Public Foundation
383 Rhode Island St. Suite 301
San Francisco, CA 94103

Phone 415-487-2111 - fax 415-487-2124

Via / Remolacha and email

1 Response to Images from a Hurricane Worn Haiti and Another Way to Help

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Marc Hall

September 23rd, 2008 at 4:10 pm

I am writing to tell all Haitians that there is an alternative way to cook and warm food from charcoal. It is called a parabolic cooker. It is a mirror which cooks food perfectly just with sunshine. If any Haitian would like to get their own parabolic cooker for free they must write to Humboldt State University in northern California and explain their situation. Also that there is a better way to build houses by filling tires full of mud and stacking them on top of eachother. You can learn how to do this at the earthship website. You can also email me for information and help with either one of these ideas. cellicini@hotmail.com

Hola!

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