(A daily radio program for affected communities broadcast on 27 local radio stations and produced by Internews - Saturday, March 06, 2010 - For more information and to pass us messages for affected communities: Alona Cherkassky, Humanitarian Coordinator (info-er-haiti@internews.org - +509 348 59387)
3/8/10
Relief effort status update from Internews (#40) #Haiti
(A daily radio program for affected communities broadcast on 27 local radio stations and produced by Internews - Saturday, March 06, 2010 - For more information and to pass us messages for affected communities: Alona Cherkassky, Humanitarian Coordinator (info-er-haiti@internews.org - +509 348 59387)
Relief effort status update from Internews (#39) #Haiti
Relief effort status update from Internews (#38)
FOOD – Farmers in the Artibonite Valley are going to increase agricultural production, thanks to seeds, fertilizer and know-howm, that it ss going to be offered by USAID.
HOTLINE – Women and Children who have been abused by MINUSTAH personnel can call directly to this number: 37-02-64-86 to report violence against them. Each case will be investigated by MINUSTAH.
HOUSING – Engineers evaluated 1,902 houses in metropolitan Port-au-Prince that they say must be destroyed. Work will be going faster soon as there are 250 other engineers being trained as investigators and evaluators.
DONOR SUPPORT – The European Union has donated $300 million to emergency and reconstruction work in Haiti. Some of that money will go to pay salaries of civil service workers.
CULTURE – The Pantheon National Museum wants to the be the keeper of Haiti's treasures that are in the hands of collectors and institutions that might not be able to care for them in the aftermath of the devastating January 12 earthquake.
WEATHER – More rain expected in Port-au-Prince and other parts of Haiti. The recommendation is for people to stay away from unstable ground that might become dangerous in the rains.
MAILBOX – Dominique Dorisan asked whether Haiti could get another earthquake with the same energy that was released January 12. Another listener asked about whether Haiti has any volcano.
SHELTER/Feature story - Space is at such a premium in Port-au-Prince that even the divider between Route Nationale #2 leading to the south has been serving as a camp site. Dozens of people have built makeshift rooms there.
ELDER – Some elder Hatians complain they are being ignored for help. Helpage, an organization that focuses on older people, has been delivering food and supplies to older people in the CroixdesPres.
(A daily radio program for affected communities broadcast on 27 local radio stations and produced by Internews - For more information and to pass on messages for affected communities: Alona Cherkassky, Humanitarian Coordinator (info-er-haiti@internews.org - +509 348 59387- Thursday, March 04, 2010)
3/4/10
Relief effort status update from Internews (#36)
DEBRIS REMOVAL - Joaseus Nadere of the Ministry of Public Works said his department has set a timetable to clear debris from priority buildings set by the government, such as schools and public offices.
SECURITY/PRISONS - Out of the 5,000 prisoners that broke out of their cells following the earthquake, 111 have been recaptured and brought back to the Penitentier National. Police have a number where people can call if they notice an escaped prisoner in their neighborhood.
SHELTER/ENVIRONMENT - IDPs are cutting down trees to stretch their plastic sheetings, or to construct temporary housing in the camps. Environmental experts are saying that cutting down trees for housing solves one problem while exacerbating another.
WEATHER - It's going to be cloudy throughout the capital over the next couple of days.
MAILBOX - Witza Petit-Antoine from ENDK answers questions from listerners in Leogane and other sites.
FOOD - WFP Spokes person, Fredrique Pierre, tells listeners the latest on how the food distribution is going on.
RETURN - Many IDPs living in the Champ de Mars say they would like to return home, and that they would like to find security where the government plans to send them.
(A daily radio program for affected communities broadcast on 27 local radio stations and produced by Internews - Tuesday, March 02, 2010 - To download the radio program: http://rapidshare.com/files/358088324/02_03_2010_ENDK.mp3.html) - For more information and to pass us messages for affected communities: Humanitarian Coordinator (info-er-haiti@internews.org - +509 348 59387)
3/2/10
VIDEO - Performances at Brooklyn Slam for Haiti last weekend
Alexandra Foucard has been awarded an NAACP Award for Outstanding lead actress and was nominated for a Grammy Nomination for Guys and Dolls. She was born in Haiti.
I was very touched to hear Paolo Pouponneau sing Boukman Eksperyans' classic Tribilasyon.
Except for the fact that I was inexplicably prevented from charging my iPhone (hence the very camera which filmed these goodies) at some point, a fun time was had by all, moi included.
2/14/10
"All Eyes On Haiti" Panel Discussion - MTV BEAT - Feb. 17th
Original Post:
Thought I'd let you know that I have been invited to be the guest blogger for this event taking place next Wednesday organized by the Black Employee Affinity Team of MTV Networks for Black History Month. It is not clear yet if the event will be streamed live or edited for later repost. I will keep you posted as I find out.
I will be tweeting the event live at http://twitter.com/kiskeacity. Please let me know any questions you may have for the panel.
The topic is one I am very concerned about: What Happens when the Media Moves On? That is at the heart of the preoccupation of many in the citizen media world, the good folks at Global Voices included.
Panelists will be Rosemonde Pierre-Louis (Manhattan Deputy Borough President), Ron Daniels (Haiti Support Project), Franky Ernest (Founder of EDEYO), Jason Carroll (CNN Reporter).
Emeline Michel will be performing.
Click on the flyer to see details.
2/10/10
Invited back on Haiti in Focus podcast
Having interviewed me 3 days after my arrival in Haiti (Episode 19) , Scott Hertzog of Haiti in Focus podcast wanted to catch upon my return from the trip 7 days later. The resulting podcast, recorded last weekend, was published in two segments.
In the first segment (Episode 20) which was published two days ago, we discuss the red/zone green zone distinction, the usefulness of citizen media in a country where not everyone reads or writes, ways in which Haitian-Americans lingering on waitlists can be put to good use and much, much more.
Player for Episode 20:
The second segment (Episode 21) was posted today and tackles shelter, bulldozing, how Haitians by and large served as first responders to the earthquake and the "Idaho 10". Enjoy! Your feedback is welcome.
Player for Episode 21:
2/6/10
Haiti: Régine Zamor on Do-It-Yourself Volunteering
(Cross-posted at Global Voices and at Conversations for a Better World.)
[Traduction Française sur Global Voices en Français.]
PORT-AU-PRINCE, HAITI, 30 January, 2010
Régine Zamor is a Haitian-American based in New Rochelle, New York, but raised in Brooklyn. Her Haitian family is from Martissant. She decided to come to Haiti after the 12 January earthquake and volunteer on her own, without signing up with a major NGO. She had contacts in Haiti and the Dominican Republic before arriving, having volunteered with Haitian indentured laborers in Batey Ocho, Barahona, in the Dominican Republic last summer. Her family and friends in the United States were supportive of her decision.
Régine is a film producer and writer who just finished a documentary film on street children in Cap Haïtien, titled Bagay Dwòl. She has been blogging about the film and about her first-response volunteering at her blog, Bagay Dwol Journal.
When she initially arrived in Haiti, a couple of days after the quake, she researched where her help was needed and wound up volunteering in food distribution, information sharing — both in person and through her blog — and in medical supplies distribution through various contacts at smaller NGOs such as SOIL, Wynn Farm, and COHEF.
Georgia Popplewell and I met with her at the Hotel Oloffson a couple of afternoons ago.
“I didn't want to wait”
When I told other Haitians living in the United States that I was traveling to Haiti with Global Voices, many who were on waiting lists with large well-known NGOs and US government agencies expressed dismay. For example, my friend Alex — who holds a masters degree in public health administration and has been working in the healthcare industry in the United States for years — was itching to be picked from a volunteer list. When Régine explained to Georgia and me how she made it to Haiti shortly after the quake, I immediately thought of Alex and all the others waiting in the U.S.
Régine decided not to wait, and in this video she explains how she connected with the work she wound up doing:
(A version of this video with French subtitles is also available on dotSUB.)
Régine and other first-responders took food distribution in their own hands and at their own cost
I have only spotted one UN-run food distribution line since my arrival here a week ago. It was near the National Palace, and proved so chaotic that either tear gas or pepper spray was allegedly used on the crowd. A handful of UN officers seemed to be handling a crowd of thousands. A system for the distribution of the global influx of aid by either the UN or the Haitian government has yet to materialize. But in speaking to Régine, it became clear that many Haitians and others willing to help took matters into their own hands during the first-response period.
Here Régine explains how she coordinated with an NGO contact in the Dominican Republic to buy food, have it sent to Port-au-Prince, and distribute it to Orphelinat l'Amour du Bon Berger.
Volunteering with the Parc Antoine Izméry Clinic in Delmas 33
When we met Régine at the Oloffson, an American buddy from her hometown of New Rochelle, NY, interrupted our meeting to introduce some doctors to her. Régine left Georgia and me to go and meet them, and eventually introduced us to one of them, an American doctor who has served Haitian patients in the Bahamas for the past 11 years. She turned to us and said: “He just agreed to come to the Sité Solèy Clinic with me tomorrow morning.”
That is precisely what Régine means by her role in “information sharing”. Via word of mouth and using all means available, she has connected tens of people to whatever service needs she has identified or become aware of.
Here Régine shares a bit about the work she has been doing at the medical clinic at Park Antoine Izméry in Delmas 33:
On her blog, she explains how she delivered needed medical supplies to Kenscoff.
Régine's journey is far from over. Like many of the Haitian-Americans I have met in Port-au-Prince, she is planning on installing herself permanently here in the next few weeks. Here are her “Helpful Resources for Volunteering in NYC.”
