Re: Digest for haitisheltersolution@googlegroups.com - 2 Messages in 1 Topic

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William Danshin

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Jan 4, 2011, 4:57:54 PM1/4/11
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Dear Edison Kiela,

I concur with you assessment of the present disaster relief model...it needs to be  changed...we have 65000 hectares of land that one of our group business partners has allocated to Haiti reconstruction. We have the know-how, technology and willpower to make a difference in Haiti and are moving in a positive direction. I welcome the support of the Haitian people and people like yourself in our efforts to make a difference. 

We must succeed in Haiti for the benefit of not only Haitians but for future of humanity and mankind.

William Danshin
Joint Venture Haiti Inc.

On Mon, Nov 29, 2010 at 2:31 AM, <haitishelterso...@googlegroups.com> wrote:

Group: http://groups.google.com/group/haitisheltersolution/topics

    Edison Kiela <ediso...@gmail.com> Nov 26 10:02AM -0800 ^
     
    To All,
     
    We all know that massive amounts of money (US$ 2.1 billion) have been
    pledged and/or used for Haiti, yet over the last 11 months the
    benefits of all this cash cannot be found. It appears that the
    disaster relief system created by the Red Cross, various NGOs, and the
    Haitian government simply does not work.
     
    I have attached in this letter a document I found issued by the Office
    of the Special Envoy for Haiti, titled: INTERNATIONAL ASSISTANCE TO
    HAITI KEY FACTS AS OF NOVEMBER 2010...How much money has been pledged.
     
    Also, according to the IASC Homepage, as of November 10, 2010 the
    Shelter Cluster has been handed over from the IFRC (Red Cross) to UN
    Habitat. “The complete team is not still in the country; arrival is
    expected in a few weeks.” Does this send a signal that the Red Cross
    is an ineffective coordinator of disaster relief?
     
    To compound the shelter relief efforts the UN OCHA issued this report
    on the cholera outbreak dated November 19,2010:
     
    “I. HIGHLIGHTS/KEY PRIORITIES
    - The Ministry of Health (MSPP) has reported 1,186 deaths and 19,646
    cases. Overall the MSPP reports that 49,418 people have sought medical
    attention since the epidemic was declared.
     
    - 40 tonnes of medical supplies and sensitization material were
    distributed today as part of a three-day distribution by the MSPP and
    health and logistics clusters.
     
    - Civil unrest in Cap Haitien continues to inhibit the humanitarian
    response to cholera in the surrounding area. The UN and humanitarian
    partners have called for calm in order to resume activities.”
     
    More problems created by those in charge.
     
    Between the IASC, IFRC, UN, MINUSTAH, and a slew of NGO reports,
    investigations, meetings, seminars, discussion groups, etc. there are
    literally thousands of documents churning about the problems and
    potential solutions for Haiti’s recovery. Yet, very little progress is
    being made.
     
    The UN OCHA does try to get to the meat of many problems by
    streamlining the disaster recovery process by using what they call the
    “3W”…”Who does What and Where”. Interestingly enough, the OCHA omits
    to use the fourth “W”…WHEN!
     
    It is mankind’s greatest and most noble attribute to want to help
    those in need. But, in this era of extraordinary technology,
    communications, and international co-operation it is baffling that so
    little has been done to help so many with so much money on the
    table. There appears to be an inherent flaw in the system and no one
    seems to know how to fix it.
     
    We, as business people involved with humanitarian aid and disaster
    relief products and programs should collectively raise our voices to
    Washington and the EU that the system of disaster relief needs to be
    overhauled immediately. Not only are millions of people around the
    world suffering because of bureaucratic inertia, disasters could and
    will most likely strike somewhere close to home. Imagine a
    catastrophic earthquake in California or a Cat 5 hurricane blowing
    away Florida and the Gulf Coasts. We’ve seen how Hurricane Katrina
    was handled…5 years later and still there are many problems. And, now
    in Haiti the same problems are even worse. While just across the
    border in the Dominican Republic they are selling resort vacations and
    hosting golf tournaments…what gives?
     
    I’ve had a thought now for the last several weeks…on this forum we
    have many NGO administrators, owners and representatives of disaster
    relief products, reporters, engineers and scientists. Let us use this
    forum to collectively add our own ideas and solutions to how we can
    fix this disaster relief program in Haiti. I will volunteer my time
    to assemble these ideas into a White Paper Report we can use to send
    to our countries’ leaders, use our reports to pull in the media spot
    light. (Right now all the media talks about is the Royal Wedding, some
    guy at the airport pissed off about some TSA dude touching his junk,
    and a bunch of idiots sitting around Best Buy at 2AM waiting for a
    deal on a 50 inch TV.)
     
    Come on people we have a world to save…will you join me?

     


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