Here’s another round-up of today’s news—including on-the-ground stories, pictures and updates—from our partners and friends on their work in Haiti.
American Red Cross
Read a situation report from President and CEO Gail McGovern.
AmeriCares
Chief of Staff Carol Shattuck recounts her experience on AmeriCares first emergency airlift to help Haiti with earthquake and humanitarian relief.
CARE
A story from the field by Rick Perera.
Catholic Relief Services
CRS turns a golf course into a relief camp in Port-au-Prince.
Concern Worldwide
Program Officer Susan Finucane offers a video update of Concern’s work on the ground in Port-au-Prince.
Leon H. Sullivan Foundation
“In the aftermath of the largest earthquake to hit the Caribbean nation of Haiti in more than two centuries, the Leon H. Sullivan Foundation has initiated a relief effort to help meet the population’s immediate needs and participate in long-term efforts to restore normalcy to a country plagued by natural disasters.
“To merely replace the unsound buildings and feed people temporarily will not be enough. My organization is working on projects to help Haiti and its people become more self-sufficient over the long term,” said Hope Masters, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Sullivan Foundation. “We who have so much must never forget to help those who have so little.”
Mercy Corps
Cassandra Nelson, Director of Multimedia Projects, talks with CNN.
Oxfam America
A blog update from staff member Coco McCabe on the ground in San Juan. Also, a video on distributing water in Haiti.
Partners in Health
An on-the-ground update from Dr. Evan Lyon, who has been working at the general hospital in Port-au-Prince since Saturday.
Physicians for Peace
A blog update and photos from Dr. Lisbet Hanson in Haiti. Also, Physicians for Peace will be holding a collection drive in Norfolk, VA this Saturday.
Save the Children
Save the Children sets up child friendly spaces in Haiti.
TransAfrica Forum
An online resource for the latest news on the earthquake and its aftermath. TransAfrica Forum also held a candlelight vigil at the Haitian Embassy in Washington DC earlier this afternoon.
World Food Programme
“Within the next week, we aim to move the equivalent of 10 million ready-to-eat meals so that people whose homes have been destroyed, and who have no access to cooking facilities, can feed their families,” said WFP Executive Director Josette Sheeran. “We are also procuring 4.2 million rations of supplementary ready-to-use foods specifically designed to give children the calories and nutrition they need each day.”
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Here are a few more updates today from our partners and friends on the effort underway in Haiti:
American Red Cross:
“We are humbled and thankful for the outpouring of support from our blog visitors offering their services to help those in need in Haiti. We committed $200,000 last night, and increased that amount this morning to $1 million.”
AmeriCares:
“AmeriCares is sending $3 million worth of medical aid to survivors of yesterday’s deadly, 7.0-magnitude earthquake in Haiti from our Stamford warehouse. Disaster relief modules stocked with emergency medicines and medical supplies valued at $2 million have been deployed from the Amsterdam warehouse.”
Bread for the World:
An extensive list of where and how to help earthquake victims.
Catholic Relief Services:
“In the Dominican Republic, the country that shares the island of Hispaniola with Haiti, CRS is preparing 10,000 packages, each containing food and water for a family of five. The first 500 are scheduled to be delivered to Port-au-Prince on Friday. Today four CRS staff members are traveling by bus from the Dominican Republic to Port-au-Prince as CRS begins to increase our presence in Haiti to respond to this unprecedented disaster. CRS has committed an initial $5 million (US) to help survivors of the devastating quake.”
Episcopal Relief and Development:
View a video statement by Presiding Bishop and President of Episcopal Relief & Development.
FEED:
In 2009, WFP School Feeding reached over 400,000 Haitian children in 850 primary schools. FEED is working to maintain WFP School Feeding in Haiti during this critical time.
International Relief & Development:
IRD, a specialist in disaster response and emergency relief operations, has mobilized an emergency response team to Haiti. IRD will focus on the provision of emergency commodities, such as water, sanitation kits, medicines, hygiene kits, and shelter materials.
Islamic Relief:
Islamic Relief USA announced that it will immediately fly a $1 million shipment of aid to Haiti.
Jubilee USA:
Jubilee USA is calling on the Obama administration to take 3 specific steps as part of its comprehensive response to the Haiti earthquake.
Mercy Corps:
A blog post showing satellite images from Port-au-Prince.
Oxfam International:
A six-strong team of Oxfam emergency specialists has been dispatched to Haiti from the UK today to assist the 200 staff who were already stationed in Haiti when the earthquake hit on Tuesday.
Partners in Health:
On the ground reports from staff in Haiti.
Save the Children:
An interview with President and CEO Charles MacCormack.
World Food Programme:
“A WFP food distribution reached 3,000 people in the southern town of Jacmel on Wednesday and, despite logistical difficulties, more distributions were planned for Thursday in three areas of Port-au-Prince with high a population concentration.”
World Vision:
“On Thursday, World Vision will rush 18 metric tons of lifesaving supplies from its warehouse in Denver to Haiti, which was hit by a 7.0-magnitude earthquake Tuesday that affected some 3 million people. Thursday’s shipment will include tarpaulins for temporary shelter, blankets, collapsible water containers, hygiene kits, and cooking sets.” Also, click here to watch an interview with Laura Blank, Media Relations Manager at World Vision.
Yele Haiti:
Wyclef Jean’s nonprofit organization, Yele Haiti, has raised over $1 million for the victims of Tuesday’s devastating earthquake from mobile donations.
As you may have already heard, a catastrophic 7.0 earthquake struck Haiti several hours ago. While many details about the situation on the ground are still developing, CNN reports that the US State Department has been told to expect a serious loss of life. Below is a round-up of statements and updates from our friends and partners. You can also read these statements from President Obama and Secretary Clinton.
CARE:
CARE is attempting to contact our country office in Haiti and assess the humanitarian situation following a 7.0-magnitude earthquake that struck near the impoverished nation’s capital city. Initial reports indicate the disaster could be a major catastrophe.
A 7.0-magnitude earthquake struck a region about 14 miles from Haiti’s capital of Port-au-Prince, according to media reports. World Vision staff members are assessing the situation and determining a potential emergency response.
CNN’s Wolf Blitzer interviews a World Vision official:
WESTPORT, Conn. (Jan. 12, 2010) — Save the Children is verifying the safety of staff just hours after a major 7.0-magnitude earthquake struck Haiti, near the capital city of Port-au-Prince.
Houses are down in the area surrounding the Save the Children office, which was also damaged in the quake, according to Ian Rodgers, the agency’s Emergency Response Advisor, who is currently in Port-au-Prince.
An estimated 1.8 million residents were violently shaken by the earthquake and aftershocks affecting the densely populated areas near Port-au-Prince.
Save the Children has worked in Haiti since 1985, primarily in the capital city of Port-au-Prince and the Central Plateau region, providing health, education, protection and food security programs to vulnerable children.
Right now, Save the Children is assessing staff and program safety, which will be complicated by the onset of evening. Employees who were in the office at the time are uninjured, though about half of program staff were elsewhere. The agency plans to deploy emergency teams and begin relief efforts soon.
Our thoughts and support are with Haiti. We have pledged an initial $2oo,ooo and are accepting donations to the International Relief Fund.
For the most updated Red Cross information about the earthquake, visit our Disaster Online Newsroom.
We are releasing all our supplies located in a Panama warehouse, from kitchen and cooking sets to mosquito nets.
We expect to see immediate needs for food, water, temporary shelter, medical services and emotional support.
I’ve been on the phone for most of the last three hours figuring out the best way we can respond to the news in Haiti.
A 7.0-magnitude earthquake has toppled buildings, including at least one hospital, and we assume there are significant casualties (the news has been slow to trickle out).
We do not currently have staff in Haiti, but we do have extensive experience responding to earthquakes — most recently in Padang, Indonesia last September. My colleagues and I have been canvassing our own emergency operations team as well as veteran relief workers from throughout the agency to determine the most qualified and immediately deployable staff.
We will begin deploying our team tomorrow and working now to line up resources to respond.
Dear ONE members,
Your mission, should you decide to accept it, is to give kids worldwide a fighting chance against pneumonia. Go to www.missionpneumonia.org, and play Save the Children’s new game. Find out about childhood pneumonia and how Save the Children works to help parents and community health workers overcome obstacles to treating a child whose life hangs in the balance.
On November 2, 2009, Save the Children is joining with other groups worldwide to bring attention to the terrible toll that pneumonia takes in developing countries. A child dies of pneumonia every 15 seconds. That comes to about 2 million lives lost each year. But, with your help, more than 1 million lives could be saved by making affordable health measures available – including vaccines, and antibiotics – and by bringing health care closer to children’s homes. That’s just what Save the Children is doing every day to save children’s lives in 40 countries.
Now we’re enlisting you to help us prevent pneumonia from striking susceptible children and protecting their lives when it does. Here’s how:
Thank you so much for your support,
-Mary Beth Powers, Campaign Chief, Survive to 5
Check out this post from our partner organization Save the Children, the first partner post in our Food Security in Focus series. This post focuses on how proper nutrition, particularly for children, is an essential component to achieving food security. Stay tuned to the blog for more entries over the coming month.
-Kara Arsenault
Today is my first day back at my office in Mozambique’s capitol city, Maputo. For the past week, I have been visiting our programs in the northern province of Nampula, where Save the Children is working to address high rates of childhood malnutrition.
In one rural community, I joined mothers and grandmothers who gathered to learn about nutrition from a trained community volunteer. The mood was animated and lively, with the women anxious to learn how to prepare food in a way that would make their children stronger. The women were a little shy when it came to asking me questions, but they were quick to smile.
During this gathering, the mothers learned how to cook enriched porridge. They had fun while preparing the food—there was a camaraderie among them that allowed them to let their guard down and just enjoy being together. They frequently sang while working.
Their children are part-and-parcel of who they are. They would never, for example, eat alone while their children played. When it came time to try the meal, each mother made sure her child got his or her fill before eating herself.
I am proud of the programs that Save the Children supports, like working with health centers and communities to prevent and treat malnutrition, helping farmers grow more nutritious food that they can sell on the market, encouraging exclusive breastfeeding, and helping caretakers feed their families well. And I’m proud of our emphasis on building community and government capacity to achieve these goals.
Together, these components ensure that families are food secure and that their well-nourished children thrive in economically-viable households. Here in northern Mozambique, we expect our USAID-funded work to significantly reduce the prevalence of malnutrition by 2011, the end of the three year program.
Malnutrition takes a big toll on children’s health. I’ve been working in this field for more than 10 years and I’m still humbled by the tireless efforts of health workers helping many dozens of people a day and parents walking hours to bring their sick children to clinics. To me, the workloads appear daunting and the conditions challenging. I learn a lot from my field visits, not only on the technical level of “what are we doing out there” and “how many results have we achieved,” but more importantly, on a human level, how people feel about their lives and their work. I come away feeling like our work is making a difference on both small and large scales. I always return to my desk with a renewed spirit of work.
-Tina Lloren, Regional Food Security and Nutrition Advisor, Africa Area Programs, Save the Children
Last week I spoke to 4-year-old Ercilia in the village of Muzingane Bairro 3. As she played with her friend Carlos on the swings at their preschool, Ercilia told me how much she loves her new playground. She smiled and laughed as Carlos pushed her high up into the air on the swing.
Nothing is more thrilling than the sight of a happy child like Ercilia. And we at Save the Children in Mozambique have seen a lot of joyful children lately — all of them laughing, playing and hanging out with friends at brand-new playgrounds outside of our preschools.
Here in the rural communities where we work, children had few amenities, much less new see-saws and jungle gyms. These new playgrounds, built with funds raised by the 2007 Idol Gives Back television special, add a whole new element of excitement to our early childhood development program. They also give children another reason to look forward to going to school every day.
The response from Americans to Idol Gives Back (video above) is a testament to the power that people can have when everyone works together to support a cause, much like we all do through the ONE campaign. With the opening of 31 playgrounds this summer and 42 preschools last summer, Americans have made it possible for over 3,000 Mozambican youngsters to learn and to play. I know that the kids are more excited than ever to go back to school this year.
The playgrounds were designed by three local Mozambican artists and the jungle gyms, seesaws and tire swings were all built with locally available and environmentally sustainable materials.

MACHALUCUANE, MOZAMBIQUE – JULY 15: Children play in the newly built ‘Idol Gives Back’ playground supported by Save the Children in Machalucuane, Mozambique on July 15, 2009. The village is located about 18 miles outside Xai-Xai, in Gaza province in Mozambique. The villagers have about 7 miles to the nearest hospital and secondary school. (Photo by Per-Anders Pettersson/Reportage by Getty Images for Save the Children.)
Aside from being a great addition to our schools, the playgrounds have created an opportunity for communities to come together and support education for their children.
Community members volunteered their time this summer to help build the structures and local auto mechanics donated used car tires for swings.
Through our work with the ONE campaign, we can continue to advocate for support for basic education, including early childhood development programs like the one in Mozambique, providing communities with the tools they need to improve the lives of their children.
-Domingos Mahangue, Field Operations Manager, Early Childhood Development Programs, Save the Children in Mozambique
Intel Corporation, Save the Children and Kiva.org have joined forces to raise awareness and funds in an effort to address two of the world’s most pressing challenges – providing access to quality education and fostering economic development where it’s needed most. Intel’s “The Small Things Challenge” aims to help ensure children in developing countries can attend primary school and entrepreneurs in need have a chance at success. Throughout the developing world more than 75 million primary age children are not in school – robbing them of future opportunity continuing the cycle of poverty – and at least 80 percent of humanity lives on less than ten dollars a day, according to data from the United Nations.
With the “Small Things Challenge,” we are encouraging you to do a very small thing in order to make a big difference. Through the program, Intel hopes to donate up to $300,000 this year to Save the Children’s Rewrite the Future education initiative, which is focused on securing quality education for the millions of children out of school due to war and armed conflict, and to Kiva.org, which facilitates microloans to entrepreneurs in need around the world.
So what is the “small thing” you can do? Visit www.smallthingschallenge.com and click on the “Intel will donate 25 cents for you” button on the left-hand-side of the website. For every click, Intel will donate 25 cents to be shared equally between Kiva.org and Save the Children. So easy to do over a morning cup of coffee! And better yet, it’s FREE.
To learn more about Save the Children or the Rewrite the Future initiative, you can also visit www.savethechildren.org.
To learn more about Kiva, visit www.kiva.org.
-Matt Flannery, Co-Founder and CEO of Kiva, & Ana Rahona, Communications Director, Save the Children
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