Haiti Relief

2010

 

In The News

Haiti is suffering from a huge disaster that has endangered its existence as a nation with this new earthquake tragedy that has taken the lives of more than 200,000 people and counting. Damages are in the billion making its economy more dependent than ever.

                                        Jan. 12, 2010

Providing Basic Needs:

ActionAid USA

Adventist Development and Relief Agency

American Jewish World Services

American Red Cross

Beyond Borders

Care

Catholic Relief Services

Church World Service

Clinton Bush Haiti Fund

Concern Worldwide

Episcopal Relief & Development

Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

Feed the Children

God's Littlest Angels

International Relief Teams

International Rescue Committee

Islamic Relief USA

Kids Alive International

Life for Relief and Development

Lions Clubs International

Love a Child

Lutheran World Relief

Mercy & Sharing

Mercy Corps

Operation Blessing International

Oxfam America

PlanUSA

Population Services International

Project Hope

Salesian Missions

Samaritan's Purse

Save The Children

St. Boniface Haiti Foundation

UNICEF

United Nations Foundation/CERF

United Way Worldwide

World Concern

World Hope International

World Neighbors

World Relief

World Vision

  1. Yéle Haiti



Providing Shelter:

CHF International

Habitat for Humanity International

International Organization for Migration

Organization of American States

Pan American Relief

Shelterbox


Providing Medical Aid:

American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee

Americares

Catholic Medical Mission Board

Child Hope International

Cure International

Direct Relief International

Doctors Without Borders

Friends of the Orphans

Haitian Health Foundation

Healing Hands for Haiti

Heart to Heart International

Hôpital Albert Schweitzer Haiti

IMA World Health

International Child Care

International Medical Corps

MAP International

Medical Teams International

MedShare

MerlinUSA

Operation Smile

Operation USA

Pan American Health Organization

Partners In Health

Project Concern International

Project Medishare

Real Medicine Foundation

Relief International

World Health Organization


Providing Food/Water:

Action Against Hunger

Ananda Marga Universal Relief Team

Compassion International

Convoy of Hope

Feed My Starving Children

Feed the Children

Food For the Hungry

Food for the Poor

Global Aid Network

Stop Hunger Now

The Salvation Army

United Methodist Committee on Relief

Water Missions International

World Food Programme

World Water Relief



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Haiti warned to brace for another big quake

PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) - Haiti should be preparing for another major earthquake that could be triggered by the catastrophic one last month which killed up to 200,000 people and left the capital Port-au-Prince in ruins, experts say.

Teams of geophysicists, who have been tracking movements in the fault line that slashes across Haiti and into the Dominican Republic, came to the nation last week to measure changes in the Earth's crust after the 7.0-magnitude quake on January 12.

Increased pressure on the fault after the quake could unleash another of the same size or bigger, although scientists acknowledge they have no way of knowing exactly when or where it will hit.

"Faults are always waiting for the right moment but if another earthquake gives them a little kick they go before their time," said Eric Calais, a professor of geophysics from Purdue University in Indiana, who is leading the seismology project in Haiti.

Preliminary calculations by his group show the January 12 quake could be the "little kick" that sets off another temblor along the 186 mile fault where two regional tectonic plates have been scraping together for millions of years.

More than 50 aftershocks, including one measuring 5.9 magnitude, have shaken Port-au-Prince after last month's quake. The U.S. Geological Survey says the aftershock sequence will continue for months, "if not years", and "damaging earthquakes will remain possible in the coming months".

Calais was due to take his findings to a meeting on Monday with President Rene Preval and the head of the United Nations mission in Haiti, in which he would stress the urgent need to rebuild the city's critical infrastructure safely and quickly.

Haiti's government has announced plans to relocate up to half a million homeless quake victims -- many now camped out in rubble-strewn streets -- in temporary villages outside of Port-au-Prince. But some experts suggest the whole capital should be rebuilt away from the dangerous fault line.

QUAKE PREDICTION NOT AN EXACT SCIENCE

Calais was part of a group of experts who warned Haitian officials in 2008 that there could be a 7.2 magnitude quake on the horizon.

But Haitian officials said there was not enough time or funds to shore up the impoverished Caribbean's country's shoddy construction or take precautions, and in last month's quake, many buildings pancaked, their bricks crumbling to dust.

"It's not too late. Now is the time to really get serious about this," Calais said.

Over 200 years ago, when Haiti saw its last major earthquake, there were actually several temblors in a row, two in 1751 and another in 1770, Calais said.

In one destroyed neighborhood in the Haitian capital, where people now live in tents made of bed sheets and sticks, curious children watched the scientists set up specialized global positioning systems. The devices, placed at different points along the fault, will gather data over three days and compare it to information gathered over the past five years.

But for all the precise measurements, there is no such thing as an exact science of earthquake prediction.

Haiti's national geological survey offices collapsed in the quake, killing some 30 people inside, including the institute's director. This complicates future research in a country that has no seismic network, except for Calais' GPS monitors.

"Scientists are blind when it comes to this earthquake ... We rely on data that is coming from stations that are far away," he said.

"It's like if you go to your doctor and the only thing we can do is look at you with binoculars -- so the diagnostic would be pretty poor."

(Editing by Tom Brown, Pascal Fletcher and Paul Simao)