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News of Haiti

by: Miep

Tue Jan 19, 2010 at 05:59:38 AM EST


Cuba allows US to use airspace for Haiti

Sydney Morning Herald
Jan 16

The United States says it's been granted rare permission to use Cuban airspace for aid and evacuation flights in the wake of Haiti's devastating earthquake.

"We have coordinated with the Cuban government for authorisation to fly medical evacuation flights from the US Naval Station Guantanamo Bay to Miami, Florida, through Cuban airspace, cutting 90 minutes off one-way flight time," the White House said in a statement on Friday.

Crossposted from Right of Assembly

Miep :: News of Haiti
CARICOM BLOCKED
...as US takes control of airport

Rickey Singh Barbados
Trinidad News
Jan 17

THE CARIBBEAN Community's emergency aid mission to Haiti, comprising Heads of Government and leading technical officials, failed to secure permission Friday to land at that devastated country's airport, now under the control of the United States.

Consequently, the Caricom 'assessment mission' that was to determine priority humanitarian needs resulting from the mind-boggling earthquake disaster of Haiti last Tuesday, had to travel back from Jamaica to their respective home destinations..

On Friday afternoon the US State Department confirmed signing two 'Memoranda of Understanding' with the Government of Haiti that made 'official that the United States is in charge of all inbound and outbound flights and aid off-loading...'

TCI unites to help earthquake victims

Turks and Caicos Weekly News

COMPASSIONATE residents across the country have leapt into action to support their Haitian neighbours following Tuesday's devastating earthquake.

Schools, hospitals, landmarks and homes were all wiped out in the blink of an eye leaving millions of grief-stricken survivors homeless and hungry.

Back in the TCI, after passing unscathed through a brief precautionary tsunami alert, offers rolled in of assistance, money and donations.

And just days later rescue and aid teams are poised to jet over to the scene of the quake.

On Wednesday Governor Gordon Wetherell pledged his complete support to international relief efforts.

Earthquake in Haiti Shattered Efforts to Restore Resources, Boost Agriculture

NYT
Greenwire
Jan 18

UNITED NATIONS -- One week ago, Haiti's biggest fears were hurricanes and food shortage.

But authorities were preparing for them. With law and order restored by international peacekeepers, thousands of Haitians were put to work building flood protections and establishing urban gardens. Experimental efforts to reforest hillsides denuded by the poor seeking wood for charcoal were gaining momentum. And U.N. officials were cautiously optimistic their Haitian enterprise could rank among their most successful.

But it all crashed down in the devastating earthquake last Tuesday.

Work on restoring Haitian forests has been suspended, perhaps indefinitely. Water supplies throughout the nation will have to be reassessed, and funding for food production and storm protection is now threatened as international attention is turned to meeting Haiti's desperate emergency needs.

Adventures in Life: The life and times of two Americans in Haiti: the celebrated, the inspired, the frustrated, and all that lies in between.

Their Jan 14 entry about the earthquake aftermath is excellent.

Translating David Brooks
by Matt Taibbi
Jan 18

A friend of mine sent a link to Sunday's David Brooks column on Haiti, a genuinely beautiful piece of occasional literature. Not many writers would have the courage to use a tragic event like a 50,000-fatality earthquake to volubly address the problem of nonwhite laziness and why it sometimes makes natural disasters seem timely, but then again, David Brooks isn't just any writer.
Rather than go through the Brooks piece line by line, I figured I'd just excerpt a few bits here and there and provide the Cliff's Notes translation at the end. It's really sort of a masterpiece of cultural signaling - if you live anywhere between 59th st and about 105th, you can hear the between-the-lines messages with dog-whistle clarity.

Dr. Bill's Solution Could Provide Food and Water to the Desperate Haitians
KGO
Jan 19

(excerpt)

There is also an easy way to provide basic sanitation to those living in camps and on the ground in crowed areas. Without this, the refugees are soon forced to walk and sleep in filth that rapidly spreads disease. Dropping Food Packages Without Parachutes Scattering Over Large Areas Thousands of starving people in Haiti can be saved if we move quickly to do the obvious. It is not too late to begin dropping food packages without parachutes all over Haiti. Our military has millions of MRE food packages in east coast warehouses. They have cargo planes in Florida to deliver the packages - the same planes we used in Bosnia and Afghanistan.

Haiti is only an hour away for these planes. We showed in Bosnia (1993) and Afghanistan (2001) that most food packages in plastic wrapping and military MRE packages will not break up on hitting the ground because terminal air velocity limits the speed at which the packages hit the ground no matter what height from which the packages are dropped. No one was ever hurt by a falling package, but tens of thousands picked up food from heaven.

How in the world the so-called relief agencies and the government officials can forget what was done is beyond belief. Major food companies will contribute millions of energy bars, Granola bars, dried fruit in plastic packages, etc., to go along with the Military MREs that should be used immediately. It took only two cold calls to Quake Oats Co. in 1993 to get them to contribute the 100,000 Granola Bars we dropped over Bosnia. They want the good publicity of a dramatic air drop. They donE28099t get that by simply contributing to a food stockpile that will not be utilized until the next crisis. How to Drop Water Bottles Safely The press and officials are wringing their hands over the other major danger festering right now. The people in Haiti have no clean water at the worst possible time. And the relief administrators do not want to use helicopters to deliver water or food to outlying areas that the trucks can not reach. If helicopters land, they are mobbed before they can unload their supplies. And they fear that plastic water bottles will break if dropped from height -- or hurt people. But, again, they are horribly ignorant of what has been done successfully in past crises. There is a solution that they ignore A group of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory scientists showed FEMA how to deliver bottled water safely to refugees on the ground at the end of the New Orleans crisis. Simply drop the plastic bottles from a height of no more than a few hundred feet and away from people or drop the bottles into water anywhere that refugees on the ground can swim, such as pools, lakes, etc. We did the experiment to show FEMA that the bottles do not break when they hit the ground and that they float in water with their tops clearly visible. Thirsty and desperate people will get them. The canals around New Orleans were ideal drop zones

.

First Shelter Boxes Arrive in Port au Prince

Jan 19

The first ShelterBoxes have arrived in Port au Prince and hundreds more are due to arrive later today.

The ShelterBox Response Team of David Eby (US), Wayne Robinson (US) and Mark Pearson (UK), who have been in Haiti's capital since Thursday, took delivery of the first ShelterBoxes at Port au Prince airport yesterday.

The team say twelve of these boxes will be used to build an emergency field hospital at the airport.

'We are helping build a field hospital with these tents at the airport,' said Mark Pearson. 'These are desperate conditions, amputations are happening every half hour. There's an urgent need for tents at hospitals and this is our first priority.'

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News of Haiti | 18 comments
no, you can't sleep on the couch (4.00 / 2)
Homeless Haitians Told Not to Flee to U.S.

NYT Jan 18

MIAMI - America has a message for the millions of Haitians left homeless and destitute by last week's earthquake: Do not try to come to the United States.

Every day, a United States Air Force cargo plane specially equipped with radio transmitters flies for five hours over the devastated country, broadcasting news and a recorded message from Raymond Joseph, Haiti's ambassador in Washington.

"Listen, don't rush on boats to leave the country," Mr. Joseph says in Creole, according to a transcript released by the Pentagon. "If you do that, we'll all have even worse problems. Because, I'll be honest with you: If you think you will reach the U.S. and all the doors will be wide open to you, that's not at all the case. And they will intercept you right on the water and send you back home where you came from."



this is not news to Haitians (4.50 / 4)
their drowned bodies and ghosts are still filling the waves at south Florida beaches. There is a personal history within my family of having to search for and finding, submerged, dead children, along Florida's beaches after they were forced out of smuggler's boats a hundred yards from shore because the Coast Guard was closing in.

Nah, the U.S. would much rather keep them bottled up in their misery where they are better controlled and abused.

Meanwhile any Cuban is welcomed and praised as a political refugee. It's sickening.

"May we live long and die out"


[ Parent ]
the whole country can go berserk (4.00 / 3)
over one Cuban child and howl and knash their teeth when he's sent home to Cuba to be with his surviving parent, yet say nothing when hundreds of Haitian children are drowned at sea or even yards away from escaping their nightmare.

America lives out it's racist creed every day.

"May we live long and die out"


[ Parent ]
I knew little about Haiti before this (4.00 / 1)
I've since read up some. It's effectively outsourced slavery, and the USA is complicit.

Thanks for your comments. What a horrible thing to have to deal with.


[ Parent ]
Well so far (4.00 / 4)
I've not seen an article saying the US is blocking Cuban aid to Haiti.

http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=...

Apparently because the Cubans were already in Haiti before the earthquake hit......


Cuban families back home were relieved to learn that all the 152 Cuban medical and education personnel working in the Haitian capital were reported to be in good health.  

The island's media reported that "The Cuban medical brigade providing services in Port-au-Prince has already established a new hospital camp next to the one that was brought down by the earthquake."

(6 days ago)

"Although the world is full of suffering, it is full also of the overcoming of it", Helen Keller, communist.


US vs Cuban aid (4.00 / 5)
http://www.trinicenter.com/mod...

Considering that the cost of operating an aircraft carrier, including crew, is roughly $2 million a day, just sending a carrier to Port-au-Prince for two weeks accounts for a quarter of the announced American aid effort, and while many of the military personnel sent there will certainly be doing actual aid work, delivering supplies and guarding supplies, many, given America's long history of brutal military/colonial control of Haiti, will inevitably be spending their time ensuring continued survival and control of the parasitic pro-US political elite in Haiti.

Haiti paying for the US military.

left unmentioned is the reality that Cuba already had over 400 doctors posted to Haiti


"Although the world is full of suffering, it is full also of the overcoming of it", Helen Keller, communist.

yes, I found those numbers interesting as well (3.00 / 1)
and dog forbid anyone in the US mainstream media even MENTION Cuba in the context of their assistance to Haiti (and to the USA's efforts as well).

[ Parent ]
The Revolution Will Not Be Televised (0.00 / 0)


NOW Obama is as bad as i expected (4.33 / 3)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/...

"Although the world is full of suffering, it is full also of the overcoming of it", Helen Keller, communist.

So you admit to jumping the gun (0.00 / 0)
. . .

Washington Post is worse than ever. Talk about a propaganda piece, and they incompetently or deliberately don't even tell you what powers the commission would have, and how it would be allowed to completely avoid Congressional hearings and procedures and force a one-off up-or-down vote on whatever rape of Medicare, Social Security, and so on it cooks up.

For attractive lips, speak words of kindness, For lovely eyes, seek out the good in people, For a slim figure, share your food with the hungry. -- A-Hep


[ Parent ]
You haven't been following the story then (0.00 / 0)


"Although the world is full of suffering, it is full also of the overcoming of it", Helen Keller, communist.

[ Parent ]
I thought you were correcting yourself when you capitalized NOW (0.00 / 0)
in "NOW Obama is as bad as i expected." Or maybe I misunderstood. You sure seem to have misunderstood my comment.

For attractive lips, speak words of kindness, For lovely eyes, seek out the good in people, For a slim figure, share your food with the hungry. -- A-Hep

[ Parent ]
Oh no;I've never said he was as bad as I expected before (4.00 / 1)
I've always previously said he wasn't yet as bad as I expected.

"Although the world is full of suffering, it is full also of the overcoming of it", Helen Keller, communist.

[ Parent ]
Hate it when all my predictions come true, especially on Social Security (0.00 / 0)
Was hoping that would be decent enough, at least for living in Mexico (?), for my retirement daze.

For attractive lips, speak words of kindness, For lovely eyes, seek out the good in people, For a slim figure, share your food with the hungry. -- A-Hep

[ Parent ]
Banos Fairleft (4.00 / 1)
Banos Ecuador...Dollar goes a very long way....Food is fabulous...Beautiful

Place to check out


[ Parent ]
Paris geezer gets Haiti v right (4.40 / 5)
Though I love this site bunches, it's also worthwhile to visit the cranky Euros and exiles at eurotrib:

It makes little sense to quote any American, French or British mainstream publication, even one as prestigious as the New York Review on any subject relating to Haiti, without a thorough and probably futile attempt to separate the conventional political wisdom from the useful facts. It's equally difficult to know much about Chaves's Venezuela, since it's on the US death list, and so it's leaders need to be dehumanized, so we can then "rescue" it's poor, misled, helpless people.

The history of Haiti, once lush and lovely, rich in resources and potential, is a panorama of merciless predation, with the most spectacular being the French insistence on Haiti's repayment of "Damages" asessed for the illegal theft of property-- the Haitian people themselves. Thus the freed slaves were forced to pay their opressors for the right to be free- even after attaining it through force of arms, and the loss of almost a third of their population. And they paid- thanks to the embargo, it was that or starve.

Little has changed.

The IMF instituting the utterly discredited but now sadly traditional terms of the "structural adjustment loan" is just the latest insult.

The US involvement is like so many others- on an individual level, many kind and brave workers and soldiers risk their lives for the Haitian people- while the traditional policy machine formed during and schooled by a century of predation turns their gift into first a photo-op for the fig leaf, and then a tool of dominance. Only an utterly ahistorical person could be unaware of this oft-repeated ongoing dynamic, it seems to me.

Haiti today is the clearest possible example of the end-point of the policies of predation with which the region has had to cope. There but through- what? an accident of inattention?- goes the rest.

Aristide "became unpopular" (do we really know what local opinion really was--or is? How? From whom?) because almost from the first day, he was thwarted and sabotaged by the regional predator. Like the Sandinistas or the Bolivarians, his every policy attempt, every nascent success was a threat to the world view those who still think of Haitians as quasi-human, or as cheap labor, in need of some stern paternal discipline.

And lest you think I speak from a comfortably safe haven of academic debate, I lived on the island of Hispaniola for a significant part of my 13 years in the area, in Puerto Plata, Gonaves, and Santo Domingo. I did reforestation research at Cabo Roho, built fishing boats at Puerto plata, and taught composites technology in Santiago.

Thanks for this, Fairleft. But Haiti is a story so heartbreakingly cruel I can almost not bear to discuss it.

Grabbing what you can, as John Ruskin said, isn't any less wicked when you grab it with the power of your brains than with the power of your fists.

by geezer in Paris (risico at wanadoo(flypoop)fr) on Wed Jan 20th, 2010 at 03:29:10 AM EST

http://www.eurotrib.com/story/...

For attractive lips, speak words of kindness, For lovely eyes, seek out the good in people, For a slim figure, share your food with the hungry. -- A-Hep


yep, we sabotaged Aristide (4.50 / 2)
or helped a lot at least, and the Haitians will never forgive us for it, and rightly so.

Meanwhile, the meme that he "just couldn't lead" merrily spreads.


[ Parent ]
Interesting comment about communism in Germany there (3.50 / 2)
I am beginning to think that communism, even Uncle Joe specifically, is all that has forestalled the West from going fascist and further and further right since WW2.  Since the "fall of communism" the fascists right has become more and more blatant and things have just been hurtling along further right in the US and will do until they fly off the rails.

This is a pessimistic view I have not previously shared.  It seems that historically most of the good that the West could claim to do was just a bare minimum they enacted to protect themselves from communism.  eg.  Health care for the masses ONLY after Uncle Joe introduced it free for all Soviet peoples.  8 hour week only at the time Soviets were on a seven hour week and so on.  The Soviets won the space race and the elites knew anyone would be fucking crazy not to pick communism over their fascism.  Communism did everything better and faster and more humanely.  Communism was democratic and cared for people.

So they put everything into killing the idea and when they figured they had won back in the 80s they decided to just rip the mask off because who cares about the peasants now?



"Although the world is full of suffering, it is full also of the overcoming of it", Helen Keller, communist.


[ Parent ]
News of Haiti | 18 comments
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