Wednesday, April 18, 2007

IMC

My timing with discussing Ann Curry’s blog links worked out perfect. Today, the last day of the semester, I am going to discuss the International Medical Corps.
IMC was founded in 1984. They are a nonprofit organization that works around the world where there is need of health care. They work to save lives and relieve suffering. Here is a list of the following things they focus on.

“IMC health care services include:
Primary health care (PHC) – basic preventative and curative services, with a focus on the most vulnerable victims of suffering: children, women, and the elderly
Mental health care – train primary health care providers to integrate mental health into their work so they can identify and treat mental health problems. IMC also sets up a variety of psychosocial programs for the wider community according to their needs
\\Maternal and child health care (MCH) – mass immunizations, well-child clinics, and training for midwives and traditional birth attendants to reduce maternal and child mortality
Health education and training – in the medical and managerial skills needed to serve local communities suffering from a breakdown in health services
Emergency relief and disaster response – vital emergency medical care, war and trauma surgery, nutrition, and water/sanitation assistance provided at the very onset of a humanitarian crisis
HIV/AIDS – diagnosis, treatment and prevention of sexually transmitted infections (STI) and opportunistic infections, as well as training for HIV/AIDS caretakers, distribution of appropriate drug therapies, and public education
Reproductive Health Care – a full range of services for women to promote better health, particularly during the child-bearing years;
Water and sanitation – to control the spread of waterborne diseases amongst vulnerable communities
Reconstructive and rehabilitative surgery – to improve the physical and psychological health of victims of warfare, including women and children
Nutrition services – supplemental and therapeutic feeding programs for populations affected by famine and food shortages, particularly small children
Microfinance – community-based initiatives to help restore economic self sufficiency and help finance local health programs
Gender and sexual based violence – training for local health care workers to increase awareness of gender-based violence and establish treatment protocols”



There is a very detailed description of what IMC does in Darfur listing the type of medical aide they are giving in the area. They also teach people how to use technology and other medical practices that will benefit them. They also work in Chad. There is also an interesting slideshow of photos of IMC assistance in Darfur. Some of the pictures are shown below.


Tuesday, April 17, 2007

NY Times Article from today




Today there was a very interesting/ exciting article in the New York Times titled, “Sudan Drops Objections To U.N. Aid in Darfur.”

Apparently, as of yesterday, Monday, April 16, Sudan has “dropped objections to large-scale UN assistances to the overwhelmed African Union peacekeeping force in Darfur.” This would possibly allow for UN peacekeepers to enter the area.

President of Sudan, Omar Hassan al-Bashir, has been VERY resistant to allowing any other nations and especially the UN into the country to assist. He feels as though it’s a threat to his country’s security. Due to this past attitude, the UN is still skeptical about the situation.

Back in August, the UN had created a plan with UN force to enter the area and work with the African Union to help establish peace in the area. But the UN would only enter Sudan with the consent of the Sudanese government.

Bashir, who is now saying he will allow the UN’s assistance, is still objecting the original plan. There is some shady area where Bashir will not allow for helicopters to enter the area.

Hopefully this is not another negotiation that Bashir is going to back out of or attempt to further change the circumstances. I think everyone would love to see the UN get in there and establish some sort of peace. I think it would also hopefully bring about some more answers and hopefully stop the government from supporting the atrocities.

Monday, April 16, 2007

Concern USA



Concern USA is an organization that works worldwide to provide emergency relief and long-term support. They work in Africa, Asia, Central America and Eastern Europe. They do a lot of work in the Sudan with specific projects in Darfur.



I thought that the information given about Sudan and the conflict in Darfur was brief, but also very informative. And unlike anything I’d really heard before. The beginning of the background read as follows:
“Sudan began exporting oil in 1999, and has large areas of cultivatable land, gold and cotton. While Sudan has also implemented sound economic policies and invested in important infrastructure, an ongoing conflict involving interethnic hostilities in Darfur, a large region of north Sudan, continues to worsen, and is now considered one of the world's most urgent humanitarian emergencies.”

The rest of the page also gives information about other areas of Sudan and some statistical information about those being affected.

The two programs they have established in Darfur are:

Darfur - Local NGO Training and Development
Darfur - Emergency Response

The first of these programs does the following:
“In 2003, Concern determined that working with local NGOs was the most effective way to make an impact in this region. An exhaustive process designed to identify local NGOs with the skills necessary to execute plans was conducted resulting in the identification of five partner NGOs:
CLOSAT, ANGATO, NDO, ZAMZAM and SUDO”



For each of the areas, staff is organized and trained. Technical opportunities are also implemented in the areas as a way to help assist.

The NGO groups then create small projects in which they assist specific groups of people and villages.

The Emergency Response program they have in Darfur is slightly different.



This program does the following:
“With the Darfur situation still unpredictable, Concern will continue to provide life-support programs focusing on nutrition, water, sanitation and distribution of essential non-food items to vulnerable people. Once the situation stabilizes, emergency relief will shift toward rehabilitation.
The sanitation program will provide 10,000 latrines.”

Almost a year ago, in May 2006, this program also started to take on aiding refugees in a Western Darfur camp from Chad.

Sunday, April 15, 2007

Blogging Experience Assignment

One of our last assignments for our blog was to write about our blogging experience.
In general, I really enjoyed blogging. I am very fascinated with Africa in general, and I like learning about areas of conflict. Well, I don’t exactly like learning about them, I wish they weren’t happening, but I like learning things that I cant’ learn via our main news sources. It frustrates me tremendously that we hear more on Iraq daily than Darfur. Not that Iraq should be ignored either.
Anyway, the whole blogging experience really opened my eyes to how vast the Internet is. And how much information is available on it! I was surprised at how much was available on Darfur, and when thinking about that I really came to terms with how much information is out there and so easily and quickly obtainable.
I had a lot of fun, usually, when finding new sites and seeing the multimedia coverage. My two favorite posts were the ones about the Washington Post page and the Google Earth. They were my favorite because I thought they did the most to bring light upon the atrocities occurring. Interestingly enough, they weren’t the most “fancy” and elaborated websites in their words. They just came out and said, “Look, this is what’s happening in this place in the world.”
Aside from the seriousness and horrors of the topic, I sometimes disliked having to blog every day. I enjoyed blogging, but some days when I was really busy I just felt like I had no time to blog and would have liked to expand on the subject more. I would suggest that the number of blog post not be as important, but the material and length of each blog post.
I hope to continue blogging about Darfur, only not as frequently. It keeps me well informed on the topic and also reminds me when I’m having a bad day that there are people out there who have it 100 times worse.
I think Blogs in general are a great Internet invention. I also think they can be a horrible way of getting news at times. But, as a guest speaker in one of my classes said the other day, blogs are bringing us back to the beginning days of journalism. When everything written was opinionated and, well, essentially, unfair. I think it’s good that we still have objective news via the television, print and news. And I hope that those mediums remain our main sources of obtaining the news. But I also like the idea of blogs. That someone can see some ones opinion on the matter. It gives a new light and different way of looking at a subject that the news mediums today can’t give you.
On a final note, I would like to say thank you to my family. I’m pretty sure they are the only ones who read my blog besides my teacher and my roommate when she was bored at work. Everyone was very impressed and encouraging about my blog posts. Especially my grandfather. : ) Thank you for waiting for my new posts every evening. I love you all! And a big thanks to professor Matson for showing us all, with great patience, how to blog!

More on Darfur tomorrow!

Thursday, April 12, 2007

The IRC (GREAT podcasts!)



The International Rescue Committee is an organization that “seeks to bring attention to forgotten or neglected crises and to pressure governments and international organizations to take action to help and protect refugees, displaced people and other victims of conflict.”



The are working in several countries across the world, including Iraq, Uganda, Darfur and many other areas. They have a huge concentration of their program and work going into the Darfur crisis. They have a very informative statement that gives a great background on the crisis in Darfur. It also is informative on how the problem has escalated.



The site also has a very modern version of spreading news. Podcasts. There are great stories from Darfur. I highly suggest listening to some of these podcasts, they are very intense, and VERY moving. One is a translation from a 20-year-old woman who arrived at a refugee camp and in the meantime has had a child. They are both now starving and homeless.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Google Earth




My grandfather, being the extremely helpful and generous man he is, called me last night to inform me about a news broadcast he’d seen on ABC. (There is now an online story as well.) It was about a new program google is doing in association with the US Holocaust Memorial Museum to demonstrate the atrocities in Darfur.

This is by far one of the most interesting things I’ve come across so far. I’m sure many people have heard of google earth. A program that allows you to zoom in on any place in the world almost. It’s like a giant map at your finger tips! I have often used it just goofing around, but I spent a while looking over the new set up they have with Darfur.



There are now icons on villages in Darfur that have been burnt down and destroyed. The falme icons allow you to zoom in on the area. But also, the US Holocaust Museum have set up little bubble of information that pop up as well. There are statistics about that village and also links to obtain more information.



I highly suggest everyone checking this out. It’s free to download and fun to use. However, the sights I saw in the Darfur villages were troubling, to say the least. Especially when I can then type in my address in Maine and see where I live. To compare neighborhoods isn’t even possible. Nothing is the same. And yet these are two places that co-exist in the

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Oxfam International




Oxfam International is another program that sends out aid workers worldwide. However they do it a little differently.
“Oxfam International is a confederation of 13 organizations working together with over 3,000 partners in more than 100 countries to find lasting solutions to poverty, suffering and injustice.”
To read more about what exactly Oxfam does, visit the about us page.

Included in one of the emergency sections is for the Sudan. The web page is not very colorful, however there is a fair enough of information complete with news updates and press releases. The brief introduction to the website reads as follows:
“As of March 2007, we are providing vital assistance to more than 500,000 people affected by the crisis, both in Darfur and eastern Chad. We provide access to clean, safe water and sanitation as well as basic necessities such as blankets, soap and jerry cans for carrying water. We carry out public health education programs to try and prevent the spread of disease; and, as the crisis continues, we are implementing projects to provide livelihood opportunities to help people find some alternative to the reliance on external aid.”

The most recent news update, March 19, discusses the increase in violence and attacks on aid workers and the hijackings of their supply trucks. The article also mentions that Darfur has become more “lawless and volatile.” It also discussed a recent incident in one of the aid camps at Gereida, South Darfur where workers were beaten and one woman was raped.

There was also a recent statistic given; “In the first two months of 2007, more than 80,000 more people fled the ongoing violence.” This clearly shows that the violence has not only increased for the aid workers, but also in the Darfur area. I think these aid workers are some of the most courageous people in the world. To go into a violent area while everyone is running out takes some guts.

The end of the page gives some great statistics as well as information about what exactly Oxfam is doing and what their objectives are.

Monday, April 9, 2007

WBUR On Point



One of my fellow bloggers from my online journalism class pointed out what I plan on discussing today. While driving the other day, Donna Roberson was listening to the 90.9 WBUR radio station in Boston. She heard a broadcast by Tom Ashbrook, the host, and several other guests, most impressively, “Eric Reeves, Professor of English at Smith College. He has spent eight years working as an independent Sudan researcher and analyst. His forthcoming book is, ‘A Long Day's Dying: Critical Moments in the Darfur Genocide’” The topic of discussion came as a surprise to me; China.

The broadcast apparently sparred a debate between Reeves and Shen Dingli, an Asian professor. Reeves was promoting the campaign to stop large business transactions between Darfur and China while Dingli was criticizing the campaign and saying that it would “fail.”

I think this is such an interesting topic, and definitely not one you think of at first when discussing Darfur. One of the most interesting statistics that I would never have guessed is that China buys 2/3 of Sudan’s oil. Imagine what the lack of that revenue would do to the Sudanese government. Assuming that no other country would pick up on buying what China stopped to buy, the Sudanese government would be forced to cooperate with the UN and other countries attempting to end the atrocities.

This was one of the quotes from host Ashbrook:
“Activists want to shame China into reining in Sudan. Their leverage: the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. China wants a showcase. Darfur advocates vow to brand them the "genocide Olympics" unless Beijing acts. But will this work?”

Another interesting piece of information.

To read some of the highlights from the broadcast, visit this site. I believe you can also listen to the actual broadcast, I have a MAC so I, unfortunately, was not able to get the audio to work on my computer. I will be using my roommates to listen later though, and I suggest everyone else to do the same! (not to use my roommate’s computer, but to listen to the broadcast)

Sunday, April 8, 2007

UNMIS

Happy Easter! Today I am blogging from my grandparents computer in Portland, ME. I am here spending the day with them. Therefore, there will be no pictures due to the fact that I don't have the proper equipment (camera and camera cord) with me!

Anyway, I wanted to discuss the United Nations Mission in the Sudan. The UN is working with the Sudanese government in attempting to establish peace in the Darfur region. They are also attempting "to perform certain functions relating to humanitarian assistance, and protection and promotion of human rights."

They have been taking government action since March of 2005. The website has links to see the original Security Council's resolutions. The original resolution, resolution 1590 and the recently, as of Aug. 2006, expanded action resolution, (this document was not available). The document is very extensive and detailed as to what the UN planned to do.

There was also a link to a basic facts and figures page. This gives you some of the clear-cut details of the actual mission and who is in charge of it. One part discussed the military contributors to the UN mission. They were as follows:

"Australia, Bangladesh, Belgium, Benin, Bolivia, Botswana, Brazil, Cambodia, Canada, China, Croatia, Denmark, Ecuador, Egypt, El Salvador, Fiji, Finland, Gabon, Germany, Ghana, Greece, Guatemala, Guinea, India, Indonesia, Jordan, Kenya, Kyrgystan, Malawi, Malaysia, Mali, Moldova, Mongolia, Namibia, Nepal, Netherlands, New Zealand, Nigeria, Norway, Pakistan, Paraguay, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Republic of Korea, Romania, Russian Federation, Rwanda, South Africa, Sweden, Tanzania, Thailand, Turkey, Uganda, Ukraine, United Kingdom, Yemen, Zambia and Zimbabwe"

I think it stands out pretty clear to us what country is missing. While the US is providing police force, I found it extremely disappointing that we would not supply military force. We can send more troops to Iraq, to a country where the majority of civilians don't even WANT us there, to a country that we're in a war with that most of our nation doesn't support, but we won't send troops to Sudan? To a place where they are begging for our help. To a place where, as discussed in a previous post, the majority of Americans think we should be doing more in. Isn't our nation's government (which last I check was protected by our military) supposed to represent our nation's people? I guess it only represents a selected people.

Anyway, the website is very simple but offers many other great aspects. There is a photo page with extensive photos documenting the UN in Darfur. There is also a link to another mission page. This page seems to be more updated. There are links to press releases, story updates, etc. There are also more photos.

Thursday, April 5, 2007

Jump and Other Short Stories


Today I want to take a break from Darfur and request a book that has stories from another time of turmoil in Africa. For one of my other classes, Literature and Law, we are reading a series of short stories by Nadine Gordimer titled, "Jump and Other Short Stories." All of the short stories discuss tales that occur in or have reference to Africa. Some of my favorites are "The Ultimate Safari" and "A Find." All of the stories capture aspects of Africa and the African culture that bring it alive. Many of the stories are from times during and the aftermath of wars of the 90's. I highly suggest reading the book. For more information about the book and reviews visit this Amazon.com website.

Wednesday, April 4, 2007

World Food Programme





I feel as though I haven’t discussed to an extent one of the biggest problems surrounding the displaced in the Darfur and Chad region. And that is the lack of food. Today I want to discuss the World Food Programme and the work they are doing in Darfur. They do work in other areas as well. They constantly have updated stories from areas around the world suffering from lack of food. The website has a lot of informative aspects well worth checking out. I want to discuss some of the news videos.

The first video I want to discuss is from April 2. The quality was not that great but the videos were interesting. There were parts in which the people were speaking their native language, which was cool to hear. There was then a man from the organization that told the story on camera. He did not speak much, just gave some basic details. The images of the refugee camp life are from Darfur. These refugees came from Chad into Darfur. A change. One of the nice things about the video was the delivering of food to the camp. The refugees are so grateful and all work together to distribute it amongst each other.




The second video was from the capital, Geneina, Darfur. The WFP has many trucks with food that go out from this area to camps and towns in the surrounding desert area. The roads are very dangerous however. The trucks have to be escorted by peacekeepers. Again, and more so in this video, you can see the appreciation for the food. And they all work together in an organized way. They also show the pathetic water pump the town has. It is so crude and water is barley coming out. IT seems strange to me to be excited for a bag of what looks like grain, and in the last scenes what looks like something worse than oatmeal. Also, as I poor a glass of water from the Brita filter pitcher in my fridge, I’m usually thinking about how annoyed I am that someone didn’t fill it up when it’s this low. I will remember that pump the next time I go for a class of ice-cold FRESH water. As someone who LOVES food, I find myself taking for granted things like steak and potatoes. I think the next time we eat any meal, we should think about the mush these refugees eat with such gratitude. Imagine if THEY got the steak and potatoes?

It was also nice to see that the WFP have set up bringing food to the schools. It was depressing however to hear that there were schools in these camps. Why can’t they go back to their homes and their schools and not worry about eating mush and establishing a permanent residence in the middle of the desert?

Two of the most disturbing images were of the infant and the child crying. The infant clearly suffers from malnutrition. It was the sickliest looking child I have ever seen. The child crying made my heart hurt. The cry was so pathetic and energy less. It was as if the child had no energy left to even cry for all that it had lost. When we see kids in the US crying like that, it’s usually because they are tired and they’ve been crying for a toy their mom wouldn’t buy them. Not because they can’t eat.

Tuesday, April 3, 2007

The UN Refugee Agency




Tonight I don’t want to discuss too much about the UN Refugee Agency, because I think the website has something greater to offer. The title is pretty self-explanatory. The organization has been helping refugees worldwide since the 1950’s. The websites is one of the most modern I have seen. There are great links throughout the site to stories and up-to-date information. There is also a section that lists areas of major operations. There is a link dedicated to Chad/ Darfur. I think this shows how on top of the situation they are.

Anyway, what I wanted to demonstrate tonight, was the photo albums the section has to show. They are listed below. “A picture is worth a 1000 words…”

Internally Displaced in Chad: Violence Crosses the Border

Camp Life in Eastern Chad

Portrait’s of Darfur’s refugees (This is my favorite, the faces show much character!)

Destruction and Displacement in Darfur, Sudan

The Environment in Chad

Chad: relocation from the border to refugee camps

Monday, April 2, 2007

The Connection Between the Mid-West and Darfur..



Today I am again putting off talking about more of Ann Curry’s links. I wanted to discuss a story my aunt Lisa had sent me. I didn’t have a link to the story so I wanted to briefly summarize it.

The photos to the left are from an advertisement done by the Save Darfur organization I have frequently discussed. The ad was in the January 25 edition of Rolling Stone. I was impressed to see that it was a full-page ad.

Anyway, back to the story. The story by Susan Saulny is titled,
”After Darfur, Starting Anew in the Midwest.”

Apparently Fort Wayne, Indiana, among other Indiana cities is home to as many as 300 people from Darfur. There is an organization called Darfur Peace and Development in Fort Wayne. It is a nonprofit organization

The first Darfuri families came in the early 90’s. There are many industrial jobs in the area. There are also many other diverse groups. The city’s population is 250,000 and 77 languages are spoken at the public school. They still face problems of misunderstood cultural practices, as imagined. But the article said most feel generally welcome.

Many people in the community are becoming activists for Darfur as well.

Fawzia Suilman is a 24-year old woman discussed in the story. She is from the Darfur region and had her home burned to the ground by the janjaweed militia in the summer of 2005. Many of her family members were killed. In the article she says, “I cry every day about how my family died.”
She has a 1-year-old son Zakaria, but lost her husband in the chaos of 2005.

Someone at a refugee camp in Chad told Suilman about Indiana and his cousin that she should get in touch with if she were to go there.

One of the things I found most touching was this quote from Suilman, “I keep the pictures of my family on my refrigerator to remember when we could not eat. It makes me sick. I do not like to remember.”

I thought this story was very shocking. Of all places I could not imagine that people from Darfur would go to Indiana. But it was nice to hear that they were so welcomed. I could not imagine how hard it was for Suilman to adjust. America is clearly very different than her home. I think one of the hardest things, well maybe not in this specific community, would be remembering your family and hoping your husband was alive, while you are in America where those problems seem so far away to the rest of this nation.

Sunday, April 1, 2007

Movie Stars Getting Involved

Sunday evening is not a very pleasant time for me. I usually am just starting to do my work. Today, however, I got to visit my grandparents so it’s hard for me to be annoyed this weekend. My grandfather, who besides professor Matson, is one of my only dedicated blog readers. He had saved a few articles for me that followed up on something I had discussed before. Angelina Jolie and her presence in Africa. While I don’t want to give more attention to movie stars than they already get, I liked what Jolie said in the article.

There was recently a short article with a series of black and white impacting photos (pictured below) in Newsweek magazine from Jolie’s visit to a refugee camp on the border of Darfur and Chad. The article starts out discussing how Jolie is a very easily recognizable person.


She says, “If I can draw you in a little because I’m familiar, then that’s great…because I know that at the end you’re not looking at me, you’re looking at them.”




There is fighting very close to this camp and it is in a fairy dangerous area where everyone, including aid workers and Jolie when she was there had to be cautious of their lives. The article also discusses how Jolie got involved and educated 6 years ago before the press even recognized her for doing so. Jolie and the article both made mention of the impact of pictures. Which is why I really liked this article. It didn’t focus entirely on Jolie and made mention of the people and the importance of spending time with them and SEEING their story.

The picture below was heart breaking, especially after hearing the story of the child and Jolie’s experience with him.

Jolie is holding a 7-year old boy who has to remain “tethered” in the camp because he has a mental disability and they do not want him to wonder away.

“According to aid workers, he saw his village bombed when he was 3 and hid alone in the bush for two days before his family found him and fled across the border.”

To see more pictures and a video you can visit the Newsweek website to see this package.

My grandfather also gave me a proto-type letter from Paul Newman who is also active in supporting refugees. Thought I should make mention of him as well. In his letter he says:

“I ask you to join me in supporting the International Rescue Committee, which focuses exclusively on providing refugees worldwide with life-saving, hope-giving assistance.”

He makes mention specifically of the refugees in Darfur with a brief history and statistical update of the displaced. He then discusses the IRC and the work they are doing. He asks in his letter to donate to the IRC. With mention of their website.

He points out that the IRC gives more than 90 cents of every dollar donated directly to refuges.