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IFRC Haiti operation gears up
25 September 2008
By Victor Lacken
The Red Cross effort in Haiti shifts up a gear this week, with the deployment of two Basic Health Care medical clinics in the field, the widening of assessments in Artibonite and further north, and the ongoing distribution of relief and aid.

Two weeks after the last of three successive hurricanes hit the country, many parts of Haiti are only accessible by sea or helicopter.

The German-led Basic Health Care (BHC) unit is being deployed in the area around San Marc in the badly affected Artibonite province, between Port-au-Prince and Goniave. The Spanish-led BHC unit was airlifted into the southern region around Cote de Fer by helicopter. Each BHC unit can treat up to 30,000 people within a month.

“In the coming week San Marc will be the main focus of actual distributions while assessment teams go to the north and south, really to look at the next round of distributions,” said Paul Keane of the ICRC.

As the waters begin to recede more areas are opening up, allowing for an increase in assessments and beneficiary selection across the country. Almost 5,000 families have been targeted by the IFRC for immediate aid, and it is expected that 2,000 of these will have received family kits and food supplies by the end of the week.

“We are in constant touch with the Haitian Red Cross and they’re having a lot of donations of food items. We’re going to try to associate those with our kits so we’ll get the people what they need as far a nutrition is concerned,” said Brigittte Gaillis, FACT leader with the IFRC mission in Haiti.

Meanwhile, the threat from water-borne disease is growing and the incidence of malaria seems to be on the rise. 2,000 mosquito nets are being sent to BHC unit in the south and the Spanish Red Cross is setting up a water treatment plant in Cote de Fer.

“Another risk is that people who, at the moment are in a shelter with a roof over their head and food, may be soon going home,” said Keane, “and the conditions in their communities may be much more problematic in terms of their health.”

With the setting up of the BHC units, trained Red Cross personnel will able to go to small affected communities with health care and health education, which will be very much needed as the community health problems start to arise.
Rice fields in the province Artibonite lie submerged in floodwaters a week after the last of three hurricanes battered the country in the space of 12 days. Torrential rains led to severe flooding in throughout Artibonite, the country’s largest province and the centre of its rice production. Many of the region’s subsistence farmers face financial ruin as a result of the floods, which destroyed much of the rice harvest. (p18294)
Rice fields in the province Artibonite lie submerged in floodwaters a week after the last of three hurricanes battered the country in the space of 12 days. Torrential rains led to severe flooding in throughout Artibonite, the country’s largest province and the centre of its rice production. Many of the region’s subsistence farmers face financial ruin as a result of the floods, which destroyed much of the rice harvest. (p18294)
RELATED LINKS
IFRC activities in Haiti
Hurricane season 2008
Haiti: Hurricane season relief operation (September 2008) - Requires Google Earth installed
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IFRC staff in Cabaret, Haiti prepare to distribute Non-Food Items to 223 families affected by the recent hurricanes that swept the country. Torrential rains unleashed floods and mudslides in Cabaret, collapsing many houses and rendering more temporarily uninhabitable. (p18292)
IFRC staff in Cabaret, Haiti prepare to distribute Non-Food Items to 223 families affected by the recent hurricanes that swept the country. Torrential rains unleashed floods and mudslides in Cabaret, collapsing many houses and rendering more temporarily uninhabitable. (p18292)
Haitians affected by recent hurricanes queue for non food items being distributed by the IFRC at a temporary shelter in the town of Cabaret, Haiti, 50km north of the capital Port-au-Prince. Torrential rains unleashed floods and mudslides in Cabaret, collapsing many houses and rendering more temporarily uninhabitable. (p18293)
Haitians affected by recent hurricanes queue for non food items being distributed by the IFRC at a temporary shelter in the town of Cabaret, Haiti, 50km north of the capital Port-au-Prince. Torrential rains unleashed floods and mudslides in Cabaret, collapsing many houses and rendering more temporarily uninhabitable. (p18293)
A Haitian man whose home was damaged by recent hurricanes receives non food items distributed by the IFRC at a temporary shelter in the town of Cabaret, Haiti, 50km north of the capital Port-au-Prince. Torrential rains unleashed floods and mudslides in Cabaret, collapsing many houses and rendering more temporarily uninhabitable. Over 60 people died in the town as a result of the flooding, and thousands are living in temporary shelters. Non food items include kitchen sets, blankets, mosquito nets and jerry cans. (p18291)
A Haitian man whose home was damaged by recent hurricanes receives non food items distributed by the IFRC at a temporary shelter in the town of Cabaret, Haiti, 50km north of the capital Port-au-Prince. Torrential rains unleashed floods and mudslides in Cabaret, collapsing many houses and rendering more temporarily uninhabitable. Over 60 people died in the town as a result of the flooding, and thousands are living in temporary shelters. Non food items include kitchen sets, blankets, mosquito nets and jerry cans. (p18291)