Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Humanitarian Negotiations

15 December 2011 HUMANITARIAN NEGOTIATIONS REVEALED: THE MSF EXPERIENCE Magone, Claire; Neuman, Michael; Weissman, Fabrice From international NGOs to UN agencies, from donors to observers of humanitarianism, opinion is unanimous: in a context of the alleged ‘clash of civilisations', our ‘humanitarian space' is shrinking. Put another way, the freedom of action and of speech of humanitarians is being eroded due to the radicalisation of conflicts and the reaffirmation of state sovereignty over aid actors and policies...


Published with Blogger-droid v2.0.4

Thursday, January 19, 2012

MSF closes its largest medical centres"

19 Jan 2012
MSF closes its largest medical centres in Mogadishu after killings,Other projects in Somalia continue, but MSF medical assistance in Somali capital reduced by half.


19 January 2012 – Following the tragic killings of our colleagues Philippe Havet and Dr Karel Keiluhu in Mogadishu, Somalia, on 29 December 2011, the medical humanitarian organisation Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) sees itself forced to end all activities in the Hodan district of the capital, including the closure of two separate 120-bed medical facilities for the treatment of malnutrition, measles and cholera.

The closure of activities in this district halves the assistance MSF is providing in Mogadishu. For now, MSF projects will continue to provide medical care in the other districts of the capital, as well as in 10 locations in the rest of Somalia.




However, the continuation of MSF work to assist Somalis in need of medical care is dependent upon the respect for personnel, patients and medical facilities. Where these conditions prevail, MSF remains committed to continue its activities in Somalia.

“It is hard to close health services in a location where the presence of our medical teams is genuinely lifesaving everyday,” states Christopher Stokes, MSF general director, “but the brutal assassination of our colleagues in Hodan makes it impossible for us to continue working in this district of Mogadishu.”

In Hodan, MSF has been assisting 200,000 Somalis who have fled to the capital in recent months. Since August 2011, treatment has been provided to 11,787 malnourished children, 1,232 patients have been treated for acute watery diarrhea and 861 patients have been treated for measles. MSF teams have also vaccinated 67,228 children against measles.

MSF strongly reiterates its call to all parties, the leadership and the people of Somalia to facilitate the safe release of Montserrat Serra and Blanca Thiebaut, MSF aid workers who were abducted in Dadaab refugee camp in Kenya on 13 October 2011 while carrying out emergency assistance for the Somali population.

MSF has been working in Somalia continuously since 1991 and currently operates 13 projects in the country, including medical activities related to the ongoing emergency, vaccination campaigns, as well as nutritional interventions. MSF also assists Somali refugees in camps in Dadaab, Kenya, and Dolo Ado, Ethiopia.


"The only question is that we ask ourselves everyday, is when is this suffering going to end"?
-Tammy M Kessner



Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Tamir-Tamirfilms Ltd

(MSF) is providing humanitarian aid to Haitian asylum seekers in Tabatinga







This small room, part of a 12-room compound, is home to five Haitian asylum seekers who are not allowed to work or leave Tabatinga.

Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is providing humanitarian aid to Haitian asylum seekers in Tabatinga, a town in the state of Amazonas, Brazil. MSF teams have been monitoring the situation of Haitians in this small town, located at the border between Brazil, Colombia, and Peru, since November. In December, MSF started distributing more than 1,300 personal hygiene kits and other relief items.

The Haitian asylum seekers first began arriving in Tabatinga in March 2010, escaping a country devastated by a massive earthquake. More than 1,200 Haitians are currently staying in the town, two-thirds of whom say they were directly affected by the earthquake and came to Brazil in hopes of helping other family members who stayed in Haiti.

“Before the earthquake, the situation was already difficult in Haiti. Now, there is nothing left, there are no opportunities. But having to wait in Tabatinga is even worse,” says 32-year-old Olga, from the small room she shares with four other Haitians.

While they wait for an interview with the Federal Police in Manaus, the Haitians are not allowed to work or to leave Tabatinga. Many are living in extremely poor conditions, after spending all their savings on the journey to Brazil.

“I visited a house where 40 people are sharing one latrine. In another residence, there are a lot of tiny rooms, without proper light or ventilation, where up to five people have to sleep. It is really hard to maintain minimal hygiene in conditions like this,” says Renata de Oliveira Silva, MSF’s project coordinator in Tabatinga. “Our biggest concern is that these living conditions are having serious effects on the physical and mental health of these people, such as stomach infections or psychological disorders.”

Without any assistance from government authorities, the Haitian asylum seekers are reliant on the goodwill of local people and the help offered by a few civil society organizations.

“The federal government needs to take responsibility for providing aid to these people, who are not allowed to work while they have to wait in Tabatinga,” said Tyler Fainstat, executive director of MSF Brazil. “Also, local and state authorities should proactively help to find a solution to the situation of Haitians in Tabatinga.”

After the plight of the asylum seekers was raised at the national level, the Brazilian Justice Ministry announced that some 4,000 Haitians who had arrived in the country since the devastating quake would be granted residence and work visas. This includes 1,600 migrants that had already been authorized to stay and some 2,000 more that are in the country illegally.

MSF launched the largest emergency aid operation in its history in the aftermath of the January 2010 earthquake in Haiti, in which it attended more than 358,000 patients, carried out about 16,000 surgeries and assisted the birth of 15,000 babies. In the 12 months after cholera broke out in Haiti in October 2010, MSF treated more than 160,000 cholera patients, or 35 percent of the total cholera cases reported in the country.

MSF- Support Our Work

MSF
Support Our Work
What Your Support Provides

Private donations enable us to deliver independent emergency assistance to people in nearly 80 countries.

But what specifically does my support provide?

The answers may be surprising; even a small contribution allows Doctors Without Borders aid workers to save lives around the world!

http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/donate/what.cfm


Press Release-Calls For Release Of Abducted Colleagues in Somalia







Press Release

MSF Condemns Attacks On Aid Workers And Calls For Release Of Abducted Colleagues in Somalia

Humanitarian Work in Somalia Threatened

January 7, 2012 – One week ago, a gunman killed Phillipe Havet and Andrias Karel Keiluhuo, two Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) aid workers, while they were implementing emergency assistance projects in Somalia’s capital, Mogadishu. Three months ago, MSF staff members Montserrat Serra and Blanca Thiebaut were abducted in the Dadaab refugee camp in northern Kenya while providing emergency assistance for the Somali population there.

These attacks on aid workers must be condemned in the strongest terms, MSF said today. They jeopardize life-saving medical projects that are already far from adequate in addressing the vast medical needs of the Somali population.

MSF is confronting the difficult dilemma of working in a context like Somalia, where the needs are not only extremely great, but the risks are exceptionally high for the safety and security of all staff. As we consider this dilemma, MSF is requesting that all people—especially the authorities in control of areas in Somalia where our kidnapped colleagues are being detained—do everything possible to facilitate the safe release of Blanca and Montserrat.

MSF has been working in Somalia continuously since 1991, assisting Somalis in need on all sides of ongoing conflict. Over the last six months, MSF has treated 225,000 patients in Somalia, vaccinated 110,000 children and cared for 30,000 malnourished children in 14 projects. Additionally, MSF provides assistance to Somali refugees in nine projects in Kenya and Ethiopia, where finding the balance between the massive medical needs of the population and the risks that MSF teams are forced to endure is increasingly challenging. The net result is that the Somali population—extremely vulnerable after 20 years of civil war, international interventions, and institutional collapse—receives less assistance than it needs.

“To effectively continue our medical humanitarian work for populations affected by violence in Somalia, MSF needs all parties to the conflict, the leadership as well as the people of Somalia, to support us in this work and help ensure the safety and security of humanitarian workers,” said Dr.Unni Karunakara, international president of MSF. “For our colleagues Philippe and Kace, this failed tragically. For Blanca and Mone, the leadership and people of Somalia have the responsibility to facilitate the safe and prompt resolution of their abduction.

http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org

4282 water projects

4282 water projects, serving 2,060,000 people as of 8.15.2011







charity: water funds a range of water technologies. These solutions include hand-dug wells, drilled wells, rehabilitations, spring protections, rainwater catchments and BioSand filters. In 2011, we expanded our work to Bolivia and Guatemala.

40 billion hours -Charity Water










women and children.

In Africa alone, people spend 40 billion hours every year just walking for water. Women and children usually bear the burden of water collection, walking miles to the nearest source, which is unprotected and likely to make them sick.

Time spent walking and resulting diseases keep them from school, work and taking care of their families.

Along their long walk, they're subjected to a greater risk of harassment and sexual assault. Hauling cans of water for long distances takes a toll on the spine and many women experience back pain early in life.

With safe water nearby, women are free to pursue new opportunities and improve their families’ lives. Kids can earn their education and build the future of their communities.

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Congo: The Malnutrition That Shouldn't Be




http://www.starvedforattention.org

In a somber, yet bold, reportage, photographer Franco Pagetti reveals the daily struggle to survive in North Kivus forbidding bush and teeming, fetid displaced persons camps, where food is scarce and the people are on edge, ready to run at a moments notice.

Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) and VII Photo present Starved for Attention, a multimedia campaign to uncover the hidden crisis of childhood malnutrition. Watch 7 of the 195 million stories of malnutrition from prolific and award-winning photojournalists.

Sign the "Starved for Attention" online petition and be part of the campaign to rewrite the story of malnutrition and demand that the 195 million malnourished children get the attention they need and deserve to escape the deadly cycle of malnutrition.

TAKE ACTION NOW: http://www.starvedforattention.org

MSF Physician Darin Portnoy Answers Questions for Reddit.com




Dr. Darin Portnoy is the former President of the board of MSF USA. He is now on our board of advisors and goes frequently to the field with MSF. He has worked for MSF in: Uzbekistan, El Salvador, Georgia, South Sudan, Liberia, Nigeria, Darfur and most recently in Bahrain. He works as a physician in New York's Bronx.

In this video, Darin answers ten questions posted to AMA itby Reddit's r-atheism community about MSF.

Thank You For Your Support In 2011!





Thank you for helping Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) deliver lifesaving medical care in more than 60 countries in 2011.

"War In Congo"

Adapt, innovate, invent


South Sudan: 20,000 refugees from the north

The violence in Sudan has forced 20,000 refugees to leave Blue Nile State. They have taken refuge in the village of Doro. The sudden influx of over 20,000 people in Doro caused a medical emergency but also led to problems of hygiene and access to water.

Médecins Sans Frontières decided to intervene at the end of November to install latrines and pumps and to treat cases of diarrhoea, malaria, and respiratory infections. Sudanese refugee Lemon Musa: "Our journey from Sali was really difficult. We were very tired from carrying things on our head and our children on our backs. In October it rained on us while we were walking."

The presence of these refugees also brings its own security issues. Tension is mounting with the locals from Doro who now find themselves struggling to have access to water. Inter-communal violence in Jonglei State has forced thousands of families to flee. Médecins Sans Frontières evacuated the area temporarily after two of its facilities were ransacked. The team returned at the beginning of January. Many people still hiding in the bush have absolutely no access to healthcare.



Haiti: Two years after the earthquake

Tents and makeshift shelters are still part of the landscape in and around Port-au-Prince. Two years after the earthquake, 500,000 people are still living in extremely precarious conditions.

The Médecins Sans Frontières team in Tabarre is in the middle of construction work and will soon see the opening of a new 120-bed hospital. But access to healthcare is still sorely lacking. Already too scarce before the earthquake, facilities are still too distant or too costly for the people living in the slums.

But the population's health and hygiene are still immense. The cholera epidemic that started at the end of October 2010 continues to reap its toll. Patient (in Creole): "When I arrived, they put me on a drip. I couldn't stand up, I couldn't speak. The pain tore me apart. I can talk now and I'm getting my strength back. I feel like new."

During the epidemic, Médecins Sans Frontières treated one third of cholera patients in the country. Its teams continue to treat new cases and to monitor the evolution of the disease in order to be ready in the event of a new peak of cases. In the area affected by the earthquake, the organisation is running four hospitals specialised in emergency surgery.






Somalia: An attack on Médecins Sans Frontières

Widespread violence throughout the country is posing a threat to humanitarian action. The population is in desperate need of assistance Mogadishu, the capital of Somalia. At the end of December, two members of Médecins Sans Frontières, Philippe and Andrias (who everybody called Kace), were killed in one of Mogadishu's hospitals. Dadaab, Somali refugee camps in the north of Kenya. Two female Médecins Sans Frontières staff members were kidnapped here. Blanca and Montserrat went missing three months ago. In the face of these two acts of aggression against its staff, Médecins Sans Frontières finds itself in a dilemma: how to assure the security of its teams in Somalia where emergency medical relief helps to save tens of thousands of lives? Médecins Sans Frontières has asked the Somali authorities and the people controlling the areas where Blanca and Monsterrat are being held to do their utmost to facilitate their release and to guarantee the security of humanitarian aid workers so that the population can continue to receive the care it so desperately needs.







Democratic Republic of Congo: Treating children

Médecins Sans Frontières has been working in Rutshuru Hospital for seven years. The paediatric unit has seen a three-fold increase in admissions since last November. Children who come to Rutshuru Hospital usually have malaria. Very weak, they need to be treated quickly. The malaria season began in September but, since November, the doctors have observed an exceptionally high number of cases. The paediatric unit is working flat out and that children are often several to a bed. Appolinaire Mbavu, paediatric doctor, Médecins Sans Frontières (in French): "Most of the children treated here have malaria. As they have low hemoglobin levels, 2 or 4 grams, they need a blood transfusion." Malnutrition is the second most common illness here. Children often live far from the hospital and delay coming for treatment. To limit this delay, Médecins Sans Frontières supports four healthcare centres in the outlying districts like this one in Ntamugenga.





Village workers improve malaria care

 
Village workers improve malaria care


Moissala, in the south of Chad, on the border with Central African Republic. From June to November, the number of cases of malaria increased five-fold. To diagnose and treat malaria cases as swiftly as possible, access to treatment needs to move beyond the hospital and into the villages. For those who live too far from a healthcare centre, the first contact will be the malaria village worker. Minh-Ly Pham, Médecins Sans Frontières Head of Mission (in French): "The malaria village workers are chosen by the community and then trained by Médecins Sans Frontières to screen patients for malaria, to give the first dose of treatment and to assess the severity of each case." Any complicated cases are referred to the health centres and children who are very weak are transferred by motorbike to Moïsassala Hospital. This programme, now in its second year, has led to a reduction in cases of severe malaria. 33,000 children in all have received treatment. The team however wants to go further and is planning to introduce preventive treatment for children under 5 and for pregnant women during the malaria season next year.

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Peter Gabriel - Deep Forest - While the Earth sleeps (HD)

Tammy's "Peace Journey"

I am going to start by saying we are all one in this great universe,we all have togetherness,like a certain connection with each other. We are what we are,and be what we will be. I want to ask you a few question's and answer then to yourself. "Are you being what you want to be"? "Are you who you really are, and not pretending to just impress others? My last question is,"Are you doing what you want to do"? When you speak to somebody are you speaking from your heart or just saying what you think would sound good to them? It is such a amazing feeling when you speak with honesty because you are also being honest to yourself, so you have no need to question yourself later. Find true peace within yourself. "Take a deep breath, close your eyes and ask yourself, "Am I happy"? Do I have gratitude for everything I have and for everything that comes into my life? Gratitude is a miracle cure for every moment in your life. Your attitude is rules everything, Like what comes into your life as well as your overall health. If you have a negative attitude then I must tell you that you are well on your way down the road of unhappiness. You can change that by greeting the day with Gratitude for everything! Feel it deep in your soul that you are truly happy and keep that with you everyday and every second of your life! We all have everyday challenges in life but do not let them bring you down just close your eyes and say,THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU! Thank you for I am here to deal with these challenges and thank you for everybody who comes into my life. Everything happens for a reason we come into each others lives for reasons and sometimes go our own ways. Some connections last a lifetime. We may not always know why but what we do know is that there is a reason. Now for that I will close my eyes and say "Thank You for what comes to me everyday and Thank you for the people that come into my life and touch my heart in so many ways THANK YOU"! Then I continue my journey until I end up to where life leads me and to where I am supposed to be. THANK YOU! -Tammy Kessner My journey continues..

Future World Music - Dreamscapes and Wishes

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

MSF-60 Countries

MSF currently has projects in more than 60 countries.



In cooperation with World Vision, SoZo is making clean drinking water possible for people who live in places where it's not otherwise available. For these people, water-borne illnesses are simply a fact of life. Five million people die every year of a water-related illness. One child under 14 dies every 15 seconds. SoZo H2O is on a mission to provide children in the highest-need areas around the world with access to safe, clean drinking water. One solution is a drinking straw with a triple filtration system that will filter drinking water for one child for a year. The SoZo Straw filters pollutants that cause typhoid, cholera, dysentery, and other life-threatening diseases. Our goal is to distribute a million of them in the next five years. http://www.GrabTheBerry.com





This video offers a complete overview of the activities, philosophy and structure of the international humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders...



Peace Love Globally: Playing For Changehttp://www.youtube.com/peacelov...

Peace Love Globally: Playing For Change
http://www.youtube.com/peacelov...
: Playing For Change http://www.youtube.com/peaceloveglobally
Playing For Change
http://www.youtube.com/peaceloveglobally