Showing posts with label haiti earthquake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label haiti earthquake. Show all posts

Saturday, April 30, 2011

How To Prepare For A Natural Disaster: Survival Tips



With the Earth having all these tornadoes, earthquakes and tsunami's going on we figured we would prepare our readers with some easy to do survival preparation tips.



After a major disaster the usual services we take for granted, such as running water, refrigeration, and telephones, may be unavailable. Experts recommend that you should be prepared to be self-sufficient for at least three days. Store your household disaster kit in an easily accessible location. Put contents in a large, watertight container (e.g. a large plastic garbage can with a lid and wheels) that you can move easily.



Your basic emergency kit should include:
  • Water – one gallon per person per day
  • Food – ready to eat or requiring minimal water
  • Manual can opener and other cooking supplies
  • Plates, utensils and other feeding supplies
  • First Aid kit & instructions
  • Zip plastic waterproof bags for documents & phone numbers

  • Warm clothes and rain gear for each family member.
  • Heavy work gloves
  • Unscented liquid household bleach and an eyedropper for water purification
  • Personal hygiene items including toilet paper, feminine supplies, hand sanitizer and soap
  • Plastic sheeting, duct tape and utility knife for covering broken windows
  • Tools such as a crowbar, hammer & nails, staple gun, adjustable wrench and bungee cords.
  • Blanket or sleeping bag
  • Large heavy duty plastic bags and a plastic bucket for waste and sanitation
  • Any special-needs items for children, seniors or people with disabilities. Don’t forget water and supplies for your pets.

A main component of your disaster kit is your Go-bag. Put the following items together in a backpack or another easy to carry container in case you must evacuate quickly. Prepare one Go-bag for each family member and make sure each has an I.D. tag. You may not be at home when an emergency strikes so keep some additional supplies in your car and at work, considering what you would need for your immediate safety.

  • Flashlight
  • Radio – battery operated
  • Batteries
  • Whistle
  • Dust mask
  • Pocket knife
  • Emergency cash in small denominations and quarters for phone calls
  • Sturdy shoes, a change of clothes, and a warm hat
  • Some water and food
  • Local map
  • Permanent marker, paper and tape
  • Photos of family members and pets for re-identification purposes
  • List of emergency point-of -contact phone numbers
  • List of allergies to any drug (especially antibiotics) or food
  • Copy of health insurance and identification cards
  • Extra prescription eye glasses, hearing aid or other vital personal items
  • Prescription medications and first aid supplies
  • Toothbrush and toothpaste
  • Extra keys to your house and vehicle
  • Any special-needs items for children, seniors or people with disabilities. Don’t forget to make a Go-bag for your pets.




RELATED LINKS:




5.9 Earthquake Shakes The East Coast, Shuts Down Nuclear Plants & The Stock Market Rises?! (PHOTOS/ VIDEO)



Worst Tornado In 37 Years Hits The U.S.

Haiti Earthquake 1 Year Later: Where Has All the Money Gone?

Aftermath: 8.9M Earthquake/ Tsunami Hits Japan!

Chile's 8.8 Earthquake & Pacific Tsunami 2010

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Haiti Earthquake 1 Year Later: Where Has All the Money Gone?


Millions of dollars were raised and more than a billion pledged in the wake of the devastation in Haiti.

A year later, it appears little progress has been made. Many are left wondering 'what happened to all of the money?'

Fox news Spoke with the The American Red Cross of Southwestern Indiana. Spokesperson Greg Waite says on a national level the Red Cross raised $479 million for Haiti relief efforts.

Of that money, $245 million has been spent on things like food, water, emergency shelter, vaccines and medical supplies. Waite says In the next year, the Red Cross plans to invest another $100 million into the country to establish a more permanent housing system for the people.

The red cross has published a report detailing where donations went in 2010.

To read the “One Year Report” from the American Red Cross - click here


Check out pictures and stories from that tragic day below:


Saturday, February 27, 2010

Chile & Haiti Earthquakes: What's The Difference? [Video Explanation Included]

Yes, the quake that struck the coast of Chile this morning was about 100 times stronger than the quake that devastated Port-au-Prince in early January. But the death toll in the very low three digits—214 reported by CNN but we’ve seen in Haiti, where 230,000 are already dead. How can that be?

Per reports: There are a few reasons. First and most obvious, the construction in Chile is far better than construction in Haiti. A popular saying among seismologists is that “earthquakes don’t kill people, buildings do.” Chile’s buildings are better built, with better materials, higher-skilled laborers, and an eye toward earthquake resistance. They are therefore more earthquake-resistant. Many fewer of them collapsed, so fewer people died.

Second reason is that, unlike Haiti, Chile is accustomed to earthquakes. It has what those who work in disaster preparedness call “earthquake consciousness.” The country sits at the boundaries of the Pacific and South American tectonic plates, and it experiences an average of one magnitude-8 quake a year. As several media outlets have already noted, the largest earthquake ever recorded, a 9.9, occurred in the same region. Globally, quakes of 8.8 or higher are pretty rare. But if there’s any country that would be expecting one, it’s Chile.

While watching CNN this guy explained it best to me here in this video...



I could not find his other explanation which was more detailed but I will try and explain in my own words. Yes, Haiti's earthquake was 7.0 which is less than Chile's 8.8 but a big difference is that Haiti's earthquake happened in a majorly populated area but in a smaller area than Chile. So think of it like this....Chile's earthquake hit a large area but not so populated of 8.8 but Haiti felt a 7.0 in a smaller place so it felt worse..especially that people felt the strongest points. Chile's strongest points were mainly in water. This is why the Pacific Tsunami Warning were called. Also, just like stated above, Chile's structure and the people in general are more equipt to handle such a disaster.


Here is another video I found explaining this as well...It's long though, but he talks about the difference in the beginning of the video...

UPDATES on Chile's 8.8 Earthquake & Pacific Tsunami 2010 [UP TO THE MINUTE]

11:30 PM ET -- Chile Navy "Committed an error in not alerting the tsunami."

The Associated Press reports from Santiago: Chile's defense minister said Sunday that the navy made a mistake by not immediately issuing a tsunami warning after a mammoth earthquake, a step that could have helped coastal villagers flee to higher ground sooner.

Francisco Vidal said, however, that an alarm was later sounded by port captains. He said that saved hundreds if not thousands of lives.

"The navy committed an error in not alerting the tsunami," Vidal said at a news conference.

Immediately after Saturday's magnitude-8.8 quake, President Michelle Bachelet played down the threat of a tsunami, saying large waves were expected but no tsunami.

However, several coastal communities were smashed into by what authorities later recognized were tsunami waves.

Vidal said that fortunately the navy has an emergency plan that allows navy officials in each port to sound alarms automatically when a rise in the sea is observed without waiting for an order from above. In this case, port captains sounded an alarm alerting coastal populations.

"With this system, in spite of the diagnostic error, the people could be warned to head to the hills," Vidal said.

Thirty minutes passed between the quake and waves that inundated coastal towns.

Many of the more than 708 known dead from the quake were in Chile's coastal regions swamped by the tsunami. Among those hit were San Juan Bautista village on Robinson Crusoe Island, the port of Talcahuano and Vichato in the BioBio region.

The surge of water raced across the Pacific, leading officials in 53 nations to post warnings. But the waves proved small as they moved past Hawaii and on to such places as Australia, Tonga, Japan and Russia.


5:30 PM ET -- Videos of the aftermath. AP has raw video from Constitucion of the scene that Chileans woke up to this morning.


This video report from Reuters looks at the damage done to the historic sites in Curico.


ITN News uploaded this report showing aerial footage of Chile's battered coast.


2:30 PM ET -- Death toll in Chile. CNN reports that it has passed 700.

11:32 AM ET -- Displaced in Chile. The National of Emergencies puts the number at 2 million.

11:30 AM ET -- Looting in Chile. AP has raw video of looting breaking out Sunday in Chile among what Reuters described as "desperate and hungry residents."

From Sky News:

Looting has also began in Concepcion, a day after the main quake hammered the country and killed at least 300 people.

TV images showed looters carrying away boxes of food, washing machines and plasma TVs from stores in the city of Conception before police intervened.

'We have to eat something,' an unidentified woman told a TV reporter.


8:45 AM ET -- Hillary Clinton heading to Chile. The Secretary of State leaves tonight for a week-long, five-nation tour, the AP reports. She is expected to arrive in Chile late Monday, where she will offer support for the relief efforts.


8:19 PM ET -- Chile quake stronger, but Haiti's was more destructive. The AP explains:

The U.S. Geological Survey says eight Haitian cities and towns — including [Port-au-Prince] this capital of 3 million — suffered "violent" to "extreme" shaking in last month's 7-magnitude quake, which Haiti's government estimates killed some 220,000 people and left about 1.2 homeless. Chile's death toll was in the hundreds.

By contrast, no Chilean urban area suffered more than "severe" shaking — the third most serious level — Saturday in its 8.8-magnitude disaster, by USGS measure. The quake was centered 200 miles (325 kms) away from Chile's capital and largest city, Santiago.

In terms of energy released at the epicenter, the Chilean quake was 501 times stronger. But energy dissipates rather quickly as distances grow from epicenters — and the ground beneath Port-au-Prince is less stable by comparison and "shakes like jelly," says University of Miami geologist Tim Dixon.


7:49 PM ET -- Tsunami warning issued for Japan. From Reuters:

A tsunami of up to 3 metres could hit Japan's Pacific coasts following the massive 8.8-magnitude earthquake that struck central Chile, a government agency official said on Sunday.

6:50 PM ET -- Tsunami warning canceled for Hawaii. From the AP:

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center has canceled its tsunami warning for Hawaii, with the state apparently escaping the roiling waves unscathed.


Gov. Linda Lingle says no damage has been reported in any county. Tidal surges were observed Saturday along the coasts but did not roar ashore. She's calling it "a great day now that it's over."


6:45 PM ET -- Chile death toll. CNN says its now officially at 214.

6:00 PM ET -- Hawaii "dodged a bullet." An official from the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center tells the AP that, at least so far, Hawaii has been lucky:

It still will be about an hour before officials will be willing to give an all-clear in Hawaii, but there were no immediate reports of major damage around the Pacific rim.


Gerard Fryer, a geophysicist for the tsunami center, defended the decision to urge evacuations of coastal areas, saying "better safe than sorry."

Meanwhile in California, the AP reports, the tsunami waves "barely registered a notice aid stormy weather."

5:20 PM ET -- Live video of the tsunami in Hawaii. Multiple streams here. From the AP:

A tsunami triggered by an earthquake in Chile has swept ashore in Hawaii. The extent of the damage was not immediately clear. But the initial waves did not appear to be serious, looking more like an extreme fluctuation in the tide than a giant tsunami.


The wave began affecting Hilo Bay on the Big Island just before noon local time. Water began pulling away from shore, exposing reefs and sending dark streaks of muddy, sandy water offshore. Water later washed over Coconut Island, a small park off the coast of Hilo.

5:10 PM ET -- The moment the earthquake hit in Chile. Video from Terra.com that was shot as the earthquake struck Saturday morning:



5:00 PM ET -- Tsunami in American Samoa. NBC News reports that Pago Plaza was hit by a tsunami wave, according to NOAA.

4:50 PM ET -- Ground reports from Hawaii. My colleague Adam Clark Estes is gathering reports by HuffPost bloggers from Hawaii, which you can read here. Here's a sample.

I am sitting in a walmart in hilo hawaii. i just tried to get to the airport but they have closed it as its very close to the coast. the police have blocked off all beach access. downtown hilo is closed and being cleared. they have shut off all the water on the coast and have asked people to conserve what they have...

3:45 PM ET -- Chile devastation. NBC News reports that 400,000 people are homeless following the earthquake.

3:30 PM ET -- How Chile's earthquake compares. A list compiled by the AP of other earthquakes that also registered a magnitude of at least 8.8.

• May 22, 1960: A magnitude 9.5 earthquake in southern Chile and ensuing tsunami killed at least 1,716 people.

• March 27, 1964: A magnitude 9.2 quake in Prince William Sound, Alaska, and ensuing tsunami killed 128 people.

• Dec. 26, 2004: A magnitude 9.1 quake off the Indonesian island of Sumatra triggered a tsunami that killed 226,000 people in 12 countries, including 165,700 in Indonesia and 35,400 in Sri Lanka.

• Aug. 13, 1868: A magnitude 9.0 quake in Arica, Peru (now Chile) generated catastrophic tsunamis; more than 25,000 people were killed in South America.

• Jan. 26, 1700: A magnitude 9.0 quake shakes Northern California, Oregon, Washington and British Colombia and triggers tsunami that damages villages in Japan.

• Nov. 4, 1952: A magnitude 9.0 quake in Kamchatka causes damage but no reported deaths, despite setting off 30-foot (9.1-meter) waves in Hawaii.

• Jan. 31, 1906: A magnitude 8.8 quake off the coast of Ecuador and Colombia generated a tsunami that killed at least 500 people.

The earthquake in Chile, Newsweek notes, was about 100 times stronger than the one that devastated Haiti in January.

3:20 PM ET -- The scene in Hawaii. A reader emails:

My husband and I are on the 30th floor of the Sheraton Waikiki in Honolulu on Oahu awaiting the expected 1137am tsunami surge. We're on vacation and got the first flight out of Maui this morning (just as the sirens were beginning). There are about 250 people up here. Most other hotels on the beach evacuated. Hotel staff just handed out playing cards.

2:55 PM ET -- Chile earthquake caught on camera. AP has video of surveillance footage that captures the shaking caused by this morning's earthquake. We've collected a bunch of videos covering the quake here.


2:30 PM ET -- Latest alert bulletins. Here's the latest Pacific Tsunami Warning
Center bulletin for the Pacific Ocean region:

THIS BULLETIN APPLIES TO AREAS WITHIN AND BORDERING THE PACIFIC OCEAN AND ADJACENT SEAS...EXCEPT ALASKA...BRITISH COLUMBIA... WASHINGTON...OREGON AND CALIFORNIA.

A TSUNAMI WARNING IS IN EFFECT FOR

CHILE / PERU / ECUADOR / COLOMBIA / ANTARCTICA / PANAMA /
COSTA RICA / NICARAGUA / PITCAIRN / HONDURAS / EL SALVADOR /
GUATEMALA / FR. POLYNESIA / MEXICO / COOK ISLANDS / KIRIBATI /
KERMADEC IS / NIUE / NEW ZEALAND / TONGA / AMERICAN SAMOA /
SAMOA / JARVIS IS. / WALLIS-FUTUNA / TOKELAU / FIJI /
AUSTRALIA / HAWAII / PALMYRA IS. / TUVALU / VANUATU /
HOWLAND-BAKER / NEW CALEDONIA / JOHNSTON IS. / SOLOMON IS. /
NAURU / MARSHALL IS. / MIDWAY IS. / KOSRAE / PAPUA NEW GUINEA /
POHNPEI / WAKE IS. / CHUUK / RUSSIA / MARCUS IS. / INDONESIA /
N. MARIANAS / GUAM / YAP / BELAU / JAPAN / PHILIPPINES /
CHINESE TAIPEI

You can see the latest alert for Hawaii here. Here is info on tsunami waves that have already been observed. And here is a list of estimated arrival times for waves generated by this morning's earthquake in Chile for spots along the North American Pacific Coast.

2:25 PM ET -- Death toll in Chile. CNN says it's reached nearly 150.

2:10 PM ET -- Video of Obama's statement. The president spoke briefly just before 2pm ET at the White House.


AP report on Obama's statement:

President Barack Obama says the U.S. is preparing for a tsunami that could reach American shores and he wants people in Hawaii, American Samoa and Guam to follow the instructions of local authorities.[...]


Obama also is encouraging people along the West Coast to be prepared for the possibility of dangerous waves and currents.

The president says the U.S. is ready Chile with rescue and recovery efforts. He says the U.S. has resources that are in position to deploy should the Chilean government ask for U.S. assistance.

1:55 PM ET -- Info charts from the West Coast and Alaska Tsunami Warning Center.

This first one shows what the NOAA web site refers to as a "preliminary forecast model energy map," which illustrates the potential tsunami impact zone.

This second one shows the projected tsunami travel times following this morning's earthquake in Chile.


1:25 PM ET -- Reporter's first person account of Chile quake. TIME's Eben Harrell was in Santiago when the earthquake struck this morning. He filed a dispatch for the magazine about his experience. Read it here. An excerpt:

The city was plunged into darkness, but there was a general sense of calm. Within minutes, the traffic signals began to function again and traffic flowed normally. Several people, upon seeing me -- a clueless-looking tourist -- puzzling over a map, stopped to offer their assistance. One young man simply stopped, put his hand on my shoulder and smiled as he said, in heavily accented English, "Welcome to Chile."

1:10 PM ET -- Obama to make statement at 2pm. President will speak from the White House about the earthquake and tsunamis.

12:55 PM ET -- More video of the earthquake aftermath. Raw video from Reuters:


12:52 PM ET -- Earthquake aftershock count. Chile hit by number 34.

12:50 PM ET -- Earthquake data chart. An interesting look at the earthquake data, uploaded to flickr by Nick Bilton. See full size here.


11:55 AM ET -- 'The TV went flying'. AP speaks to an American tourist in Chile who describes the experience of being woken up by the quake.


11:50 AM ET -- Aftershocks in Chile. US Geological Survey reports that the country was just hit by its 30th major aftershock, this one of a magnitude of 5.5.

11:40 AM ET -- Video of the aftermath. Raw video from the AP in the wake of Saturday morning's earthquake.



11:30 AM ET -- Evacuations in Hawaii. From CNN breaking news email: "Sirens sound across Hawaii, warning of possible tsunami and signaling people in coastal areas to evacuate."

According to the U.S. Geological Survey, tsunami waves have reached as high as 7.7 feet off the coast of Chile.

11:27 AM ET -- Map of the Chile earthquake. From the U.S. Geological Survey web site.

11:25 AM ET -- Info from the US Department of State Bureau of Consular Affairs. Via their Twitter feed:

Americans in #Chile who need assistance should contact local authorities or US Embassy in Santiago (330-3476, email santiagoamcit@state.gov)
If you are concerned about a U.S. citizen in #Chile & have not been able to contact them email Chile Task Force: ChileEarthquake@state.gov

11:15 AM ET -- White House statement. From Robert Gibbs: "We are closely monitoring the situation, including the potential for a tsunami. Our thoughts and prayers are with the people of Chile, and we stand ready to help in this hour of need."

11:12 AM ET -- Looking for someone lost in the quake. Google has a person finder app set up here where you write in about someone you are looking for, as well as pass along information you may have about someone.

11:10 AM ET -- Latest death count. CNN has it at 122.

10:30 AM ET -- Tsunami warnings in effect. The following places have been listed:

CHILE / PERU / ECUADOR / COLOMBIA / ANTARCTICA / PANAMA /
COSTA RICA / NICARAGUA / PITCAIRN / HONDURAS / EL SALVADOR /
GUATEMALA / FR. POLYNESIA / MEXICO / COOK ISLANDS / KIRIBATI /
KERMADEC IS / NIUE / NEW ZEALAND / TONGA / AMERICAN SAMOA /
SAMOA / JARVIS IS. / WALLIS-FUTUNA / TOKELAU / FIJI /
AUSTRALIA / HAWAII / PALMYRA IS. / TUVALU / VANUATU /
HOWLAND-BAKER / NEW CALEDONIA / JOHNSTON IS. / SOLOMON IS. /
NAURU / MARSHALL IS. / MIDWAY IS. / KOSRAE / PAPUA NEW GUINEA /
POHNPEI / WAKE IS. / CHUUK / RUSSIA / MARCUS IS. / INDONESIA /
N. MARIANAS / GUAM / YAP / BELAU / JAPAN / PHILIPPINES /
CHINESE TAIPEI

Estimated arrival times in the US are here.

UPDATE: 8:25 a.m. -- 1,000 times more powerful than the Haiti earthquake. From the New York Times:

Phone lines were down in Concepcion as of 7:30 a.m. and no reports were coming out of that area. The quake in Chile was 1,000 times more powerful than the magnitude 7.0 earthquake that caused widespread damage in Haiti on Jan 12, killing at least 230,000, earthquake experts reported on CNN International.

UPDATE: 8:00 a.m. -- 78 and rising. AP now reports that the death toll is at 78 and rising. Officials have no information yet on number of injured.

UPDATE: 6:43 a.m. -- 47 dead. Reuters now reports that 47 people have died in the quake.

President Michele Bachelet has declared a "state of catastrophe," according to the Associated Press:

SANTIAGO, Chile - A massive 8.8-magnitude earthquake struck Chile early Saturday, collapsing buildings, killing at least 16 people and downing phone lines. President Michele Bachelet declared a "state of catastrophe" in central Chile and said the death toll was rising.

Tsunami warnings were issued over a wide area, including South America, Hawaii, Australia and New Zealand, Japan, the Philippines, Russia and many Pacific islands.

"We have had a huge earthquake, with some aftershocks," Bachelet said, appealing from an emergency response center for Chileans to remain calm. "Despite this, the system is
functioning. People should remain calm. We're doing everything we can with all the forces we have. Any information we will share immediately."

Bachelet said early reports were that 16 people had been killed, and "without a doubt, with an earthquake of this magnitude, there will be more deaths."

In the 2 1/2 hours following the 90-second quake, the U.S. Geological Survey reported 11 aftershocks, of which five measured 6.0 or above.

She urged people to avoid traveling in the dark, since traffic lights are down, to avoid causing more fatalities.

The quake hit 200 miles (325 kilometers) southwest of the capital, Santiago, at a depth of 22 miles (35 kilometers) at 3:34 a.m. (0634 GMT; 1:34 a.m. EST), the U.S. Geological Survey reported.

The epicenter was just 70 miles (115 kilometers) from Concepcion, Chile's second-largest city, where more than 200,000 people live along the Bio Bio river, and 60 miles from the ski town of Chillan, a gateway to Andean ski resorts that was destroyed in a 1939 earthquake.

In Santiago, the capital, modern buildings are built to withstand earthquakes, but many older ones were heavily damaged, including the Nuestra Senora de la Providencia church, whose bell tower collapsed. An apartment building's two-level parking lot also flattened onto the ground floor, smashing about 50 cars whose alarms and horns rang incessantly. A bridge just outside the capital also collapsed, and at least one car flipped upside down.

In the coastal city of Vina del Mar, the earthquake struck just as people were leaving a disco, Julio Alvarez told Radio Cooperativa in Santiago. "It was very bad, people were screaming, some people were running, others appeared paralyzed. I was one of them."

Bachelet said she was declaring a "state of catastrophe" in 3 central regions of the country, and that while emergency responders were waiting for first light to get details, it was evident that damage was extensive.

UPDATE: 5:56 a.m. -- 17 dead. At least 17 people have died in Chile's earthquake, according to radio reports from Santiago. Reuters:

Local radio said 17 people were killed and President Michelle Bachelet confirmed six deaths, saying more were possible. Telephone and power lines were down, making a quick damage assessment difficult in the early morning darkness.

"Never in my life have I experienced a quake like this, it's like the end of the world," one man told local television from the city of Temuco, where the quake damaged buildings and forced staff to evacuate the regional hospital.

UPDATE: 4:35 a.m. -- Tsunami warnings. Warnings from the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center.

UPDATE: 4:32 a.m. -- 10 people confirmed dead. A report from a live broadcast in Santiago, Chile says that 10 people are confirmed dead.

Earlier this morning, Chile's president confirmed that six people were killed. Reuters:

President Michelle Bachelet said six people were killed and that more deaths were possible. Telephone and power lines were down, making a quick assessment of the damage difficult in the early morning darkness.

UPDATE: 4:21 a.m. -- Chile earthquake pictures, based in Santiago, Chile.


UPDATE: 4:15 a.m. -- Tsunami generated. CNN International reports that the earthquake has generated a Tsunami. Warnings have been issued for Chile and Peru. A tsunami watch has been issued for Ecuador, Colombia, Panama, Costa Rica and Antarctica.

SANTIAGO, Chile (AP)-- A massive 8.8-magnitude earthquake capable of tremendous damage struck central Chile early Saturday, shaking the capital for a minute and a half and setting off a tsunami. Buildings collapsed and phone lines and electricity were down, making the extent of the damage difficult to determine.

The quake hit 200 miles (325 kilometers) southwest of the capital, Santiago, at a depth of 22 miles (35 kilometers) at 3:34 a.m. (0634 GMT; 1:34 a.m. EST), the U.S. Geological Survey reported.

Thursday, February 4, 2010

"We Are The World" Behind The Scenes 2010 Recording Footage f/ Lionel Richie, Quincy Jones, Barbara Streisand, LL Cool J + 100 others! [VIDEO]

Quincy Jones and Lionel Richie have begun work on the latest all-star recording of "We Are the World" to benefit Haitian earthquake victims. The pair assembled 100 actors and musicians for the re-recording. I'm talking from Jamie Foxx to Barbara Streisand to LL Cool J to Celene Dion and even little Justin Bieber....

It really is beautiful to see all of these stars in one room for one cause. Here is the behind the scenes footage, watch as everyone interacts with eachother:



AND HERE IS THE ORIGINAL W/ MICHEAL JACKSON, TINA TURNER & MORE:

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Celebrities Making Songs & Raising More Money For Haiti... Over $61 Million So Far!


Sources say, Robbie Williams and Kylie Minogue will sing on Simon Cowell's charity single for the victims of the Haiti earthquake. It is also said that Cheryl Cole and Take That would also sing on the track, a cover of REM's Everybody Hurts.

Meanwhile, Radiohead have raised more than $500,000 (£308,192) for the appeal with a special gig in Los Angeles.

And George Clooney's global telethon has so far raised $61m (£37.6m).

It is believed the 7.0 magnitude quake on the 12 of January killed as many as 200,000 people. An estimated 1.5 million people have been left homeless.

Recording for Cowell's single has already started, with Leona Lewis, JLS, James Blunt and Joe McElderry laying down their vocals.

Half of the single's proceeds will go to the Sun's Helping Haiti fund and the rest will be donated to the Disasters Emergency Committee.

Radiohead performed for more than two hours on Sunday at the Henry Fonda Theatre.

Stars such as Justin Timberlake, Jessica Biel, Charlize Theron, Anna Paquin and Daniel Craig were in the crowd.
Fans had bid for tickets in an online auction, with proceeds going to Oxfam International.

Some of the world's most famous celebrities, including Madonna, Jay Z, Rihanna and Mary J Blige participated in Clooney's Hope for Haiti Now telethon, which took place on Friday.

It was shown on all major US TV channels, YouTube, MySpace and on MTV in the UK.

Diddy's Son's Sweet 16! $300,000 Mayback, Nicki Minaj, Jersey Shore & More! [Photos & Video]



Yes Lil Kim, we are surprised too! lol

Diddy also gave his son $10,000 to start a bank account [nice huh lol] but Justin decided to donate all of that money to Wyclef's charity to help Haiti. When Diddy's reps were asked about HIS donation to the Haiti Relief fund, his reps said they 'do not have that information.








Damn Diddy's kid all the way to the left looks way too much like him! lol And I'm not even going to talk about the one in the back making kissing faces! haha

Sources say, The car that was given to his son Justin, a supped up (sic) version of the Maybach Exelero, cost $360,000. and a uniformed driver to escort him around New York City.

Why the driver? Well, that’s because Justin is just learning to drive and won’t be able to ride around his home city for the next two years without an instructor in the passenger seat.

Monday, January 18, 2010

Sandra Bullock, Jay-Z, Madonna, Lady Gaga & More Donate Millions! Russel Simmons Prematurely Says Tiger Woods Donated 3Mil, it's FALSE??

Sandra Bullock said she donated US$1 million (NZ$1.35) toward Haitian earthquake relief, and Madonna announced she gave US$250,000 (NZ$338,685) toward the effort as celebrity aid continued to pour into the devastated country.

Bullock's contribution went to Doctors Without Borders' emergency operations in Port-Au-Prince, where three of the organisation's existing facilities were damaged by the magnitude 7.0 quake.

"I wanted to ensure that my donation would be used immediately to meet the needs of the Haitian people affected by this catastrophic event," said Bullock in a statement.
Madonna's gift was to Partners In Health, a longtime medical provider in Haiti.
"I urge all of my friends and fans around the world to join me collectively to match my contribution or give in any way you can," she said. "We must act now."

Despite the controversy still surrounding his name, the scandal-hit Woods is donating $3 million for assistance in the rescue and relief effort in earthquake-ravaged Haiti.

Woods reportedly is planning to make the donation, consisting of doctors and supplies to Wyclef Jean, through media mogul Russell Simmons.

The disgraced golf pro Woods will give the weighty sum to Haiti native Wyclef Jean’s Yele foundation in the hopes of creating a mobile hospital.

"Tiger Woods is working on sending a mobile hospital with 50 EMTs to go set up a triage," Simmon tweeted.

Word is, Rus prematurely tweeted about Tiger's donation. Tiger Woods has not yet pledged any money to the ongoing relief effort in Haiti, said the head of his charitable foundation.

"We're currently researching the most effective plan to aid in the relief effort. Historically, we have found being part of the rebuilding effort to be the most effective approach for the Foundation."

Earlier Friday, Not On Our Watch, an advocacy and grantmaking group founded by George Clooney, Brad Pitt and others, donated $1 million to Partners in Health.

George Clooney, who plans to host a telethon 22 January along with other celebrities, and Lady GaGa, who announced that all of the proceeds from her 24 January Monster Ball show in New York will also go towards helping the earthquake-stricken country.

You can purchase merchandise from LadyGaga.com on the 24th – all of those proceeds will go to helping Haiti as well.

Jay-Z, U2 and Swizz Beatz teamed up to record a song to aid in the relief effort. On Saturday, producer Swizz Beats hinted via Twitter that the project was in the works. "Me, Bono, Hova, have something to say about Haiti stay tunned [sic]," he wrote. "I told you I was working on something amazing for Haiti they need us!!!!"

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Haitians Respond To Pat Robertson's Comment That Haiti Has "A Pack w/ The Devil"



Video is from The Miami Herald includes Mr. Robertson’s remarks, and a response from Hans Mardy of the Haitian-American Emergency Relief Committee, who suggested that it was the slavery imposed on the Africans taken to Haiti in chains that was devilish, not their successful bid for independence in 1804:

Wyclef Haiti Charity Under Fiscal Scrutiny/ Hear His Reponse!

The Washington Post reported that by Friday morning, just days after the earthquake hit, Wyclef Jean's Yele Haiti Foundation had raised more than $1.5 million.

Groups that vet charities are raising doubts about the organization backed by Haitian-born rapper Wyclef Jean, questioning its accounting practices and ability to function in earthquake-hit Haiti. Even as hundreds of thousands of dollars poured into The Wyclef Jean Foundation Inc. via text message, experts questioned how much of the money would help those in need.

”It’s questionable. There’s no way to get around that,” said Art Taylor, president and chief executive of the Better Business Bureau’s Wise Giving Alliance.

Undoubtedly, Jean's celebrity helped draw in donors: He's an internationally known musician from Haiti who won a Grammy with the Fugees and went on to a hugely successful solo career. But an analysis of the charity's tax returns raises questions about how it has spent money in the past, with administrative expenses that appear to be higher than comparable charities and payments to businesses owned by the musician and a board member, including $100,000 for a performance by Jean at a 2006 benefit concert.

"It seems clear that a significant amount of the monies that this charity raises go for costs other than providing benefits to Haitians in need," said Dean Zerbe, national managing director of Alliant Group, a tax services company, and the former tax counsel to the Senate Finance Committee, which oversees charities.

The concerns were first reported on The Smoking Gun Web site.

"It brings real caution for donors that want to help in Haiti that they might want to take a harder look at this organization but also consider the significant number of charities that have been doing good work in Haiti that don't have these question marks," Zerbe said.

Hugh Locke, president of Yele Haiti, said the charity does what others can't, because Jean gives it unusual access to the country's slums. He said the group hopes to spend a higher percentage of its budget on services as it gains experience. "I think people should be very comfortable that any money given to Yele Haiti is going 100 percent to emergency relief."

The earthquake prompted so much donor interest in Yele Haiti that its Web site crashed Thursday. Yele Haiti also is getting much publicity at events, including a fundraiser Monday at the 9:30 Club and a telethon next Friday hosted by actor George Clooney. It is collecting supplies Sunday in Miami and airlifting them to Port-au-Prince next week, Locke said.
The charity provides scholarships, funds a soccer team, takes students on environmental-education camping trips and employs women to cook for schools, according to Yele Haiti. After a 2008 storm, it helped a food program distribute emergency rations to 6,000 families without violence, Locke said, organizing the community to distribute the food rather than sending in aid workers with armed guards.
But its financial records raise questions, experts say. In 2006, Yele Haiti had about $1 million in revenue, according to tax documents. More than a third of the money went to payments to related parties, said lawyer James Joseph, who specializes in nonprofit issues.
"It might be completely legitimate. But it's certainly something I would want to look into more carefully," Joseph said.

For instance, the charity recorded a payment of $250,000 to Telemax, a TV station and production company in Haiti in which Jean and Jerry Duplessis, both members of Yele Haiti's board of directors, had a controlling interest. The charity paid about $31,000 in rent to Platinum Sound, a Manhattan recording studio owned by Jean and Duplessis. And it spent an additional $100,000 for Jean's performance at a benefit concert in Monaco. Locke said that Jean and Duplessis were unavailable for comment Friday.

The Telemax money was used for "everything from public-service announcements to educational programming," said Jesse Derris of the public relations firm Sunshine, Sachs and Associates, which is representing Yele Haiti. They used their own company "because it was a way to buy time at a significant discount."
The rent included office space and shared receptionist services for the charity and is "severely reduced" below market rate, Derris said. All the proceeds of the benefit concert went directly to Yele Haiti, he said. Locke said the $100,000 included expenses, such as payments to backup musicians and production costs.

Yele Haiti reported nearly $1.9 million in income on its 2008 tax return.


Wyclef Jean recently heard these comments and responded in a YouTube statement:




ALSO CHECK HIM OUT GETTING INTERVIEWED IN HAITI PRIOR TO THIS MESSAGE:

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Haiti's Earthquake Death Toll Over 100,000/ Wyclef Raises Over $400,000/ Pat Robertson Says Haiti Has "Pack w/ The Devil" [PHOTOS + VIDEOS INCLUDED]


Rescue workers struggle to clear rubble and bodies from the streets of Haiti's "flattened" capital, where a government official said the death toll from Tuesday's 7.0-magnitude earthquake may exceed 100,000.

Thousands of injured people waited for care outside badly damaged hospitals, while an unknown number remained trapped inside collapsed buildings. Basic services like water and electricity were out, and Haitian President Rene Preval said his government needs help clearing streets so rescuers can reach some of the hardest-hit areas.





"We need medicine. We need medical help in general," Preval told CNN. "Some of the hospitals, they collapsed."

Phone lines are down as well. So it is extremely difficult to those not in Haiti to speak with their loved ones.




The Dominican Republic was the first country to give aid to Haiti in the aftermath of Tuesday's devastating earthquake. They set aside historic tensions, rushes heavy equipment to Haiti to help remove earthquake debris.

Superstar musician Wyclef Jean, a native of Haiti, has helped raise over $400,000 for his native country, thanks to text-message donations. Jean and the Miami-based Give On The Go campaign joined forces to encourage people from around the world to send a text message of "Yele" to 501501 on their mobile device which would then charge $5 to the donor's cellular phone bill.

Responding to the devastation from the Haiti earthquake, Obama administration officials on Wednesday temporarily suspended deportations of illegal immigrants from that country.

While still helping the relief, there are others that may say Haiti's energy and old ways may have caused this. American televangelist, Pat Robertson, has everyone wide eyed as some of his recent comments on the quake. Robertson said Haiti has had a "pack with the devil" for years while commenting on CBN News. You can watch the video below.




AGAIN, TO HELP GET RELIEF TO HAITI PLEASE TEXT "Yele" to 501501 to donate $5.