Milhares de norte-americanos evacuados

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Patton
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#61 Mensagem por Patton » Sáb Set 03, 2005 6:55 pm

Soldados da guarda nacional, que deveriam auxiliar na manutenção da ordem e controlarem a saída dos moradores, estavam no Iraque.


ISSO TAMBEM eh errado. Tem soldados sufficente nos EUA pra cuidar com essa problema, mas se eles nao sao mobilizados pra fazer alguma coisa nao ajanta nada.

Os cortes nos gastos sociais tem aumentado em muito a pobreza.


Voce tem alguma coisa dizendo que os programas sociais de New Oreleans forums cortatos? De fato, NO tinha mais programas sociais do que quasi qual quer outro cidade nos EUA. Isso tambem eh o problema. Estes pessoas vivem do Governo e entao nao sabem como se-suportar/trabalhar por que o governo simplesmente dava tudo pra eles. E agora eles perdem ajuda do governo por algumas dias e nao sabem como sobre viver sem ele.

Tem alguma pessoa aqui que reconhece a realidade?




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#62 Mensagem por Túlio » Sáb Set 03, 2005 7:20 pm

Hey, Patton, muito legal aquele lance da Guarda Nacional comandada pelo governador do estado, aqui seria magnífico... Bem, talvez não em Minas, imagina se o Itamar volta, é só o Governo Federal não rezar o terço direito e ele declara guerra. Aqui no RS, então, se um dia aparecer um político gaúcho que seja macho - ainda não vi nenhum - e assuma o governo do estado, a Guerra dos Farrapos começaria de novo... :twisted: :twisted: :twisted:
Agora, a sério, a Air National Guard também é comandada pelos governadores?




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#63 Mensagem por Patton » Sáb Set 03, 2005 7:44 pm

Agora, a sério, a Air National Guard também é comandada pelos governadores?


Sim. Sabe existe varios componentes das FA dos EUA. A USAF e US Army sao commandados diretamente Pelo Presidente (Bush). Agora cada estado nos EUA tem sua propria Forca Area e tabem exercito que se-chama de "National Guard" and "Air National Guard" que sao comandaos pelos Governadores dos estados. Agora, se o Presidente quiser, ele pode "federalizar" a Guarda nacional pra aumentar e suportar o ativo exercito e forca area (como na Guerra no Iraque) e eles por um tempo sao comadados pelo Presidente ate ele entrege comado de novo pra os estados, mas se eles nao sao federalizados os Governadores tem autoridade sobre a Guarda.

Por examplo, no dia 11 de Setembro, Governador Pataki de Nova York ligou o governador de Massechussets pra pedir por seus F-15s a defender o ceu sobre a cidade de Nova York por que os F-16s da guarda de Nova York nao eram prontos.




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#64 Mensagem por Túlio » Sáb Set 03, 2005 8:19 pm

Tem que respeitar, país organizado e que dá à Defesa o seu devido valor é outra coisa... Agora, não quero iludir ninguém, não considero teu país - e seu 'establishment' - como amigo e muito menos aliado, acho que ainda vamos nos 'pegar' e, sinto - mesmo - dizer que, com base em coisas como as que citaste e outras que tenho visto, ouvido e/ou lido, creio que vamos entrar por um cano daqueles... [081] Amazônia, ó, só com passaporte e /ou green card... :twisted:




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#65 Mensagem por delmar » Sáb Set 03, 2005 10:51 pm

Também acho que dão muito valor a defesa do país, especialmente com os contratos bilionários para as indústrias do complexo político militar. Já que não sobrou dinheiro para repararem os diques que cercam Nova Orleans, poderiam, ao menos, terem mandado alguns porta-aviões (tem sobrando) e similares para defenderem o povo do furacão. Afinal é esta a função de um governo, promover o bem da nação e de seus cidadãos.

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#66 Mensagem por Túlio » Sáb Set 03, 2005 11:31 pm

Podes ter certeza, Delmar, não vai se repetir, é que nem o caso dos F5 que 'abateram' os F15 na Red Flag: uma vez, tudo bem, mais de uma, não mesmo... Se os nossos 'governantes' tivessem o mesmo bom senso, não seríamos botim para os ianques, como breve seremos... :evil:




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#67 Mensagem por delmar » Dom Set 04, 2005 12:14 am

tulio escreveu:Podes ter certeza, Delmar, não vai se repetir, é que nem o caso dos F5 que 'abateram' os F15 na Red Flag: uma vez, tudo bem, mais de uma, não mesmo... Se os nossos 'governantes' tivessem o mesmo bom senso, não seríamos botim para os ianques, como breve seremos... :evil:


Pode repetir-se sim, em Nova Orleans ou outro lugar qualquer. Estão previstos mais cortes de impostos para os cidadãos mais ricos (o projeto já está no congresso americano) com uma nova diminuição dos gastos em saúde pública e beneficios sociais para os mais pobres. O aumento do deficit vai impedir também gastos em obras de defesa cívil, como foi o caso dos diques de Nova Orleans. Talvez com o tamanho da tragédia haja uma mudança da opinião pública que acabe influenciando os senadores e deputados para não aprovarem o projeto.
A evacuação de Nova Orleans foi um "salve-se quem puder", cada um por si e Deus por todos. O que os jornais americanos perguntam é exatamente sobre a defesa nacional. O que aconteceria se fosse uma atentado terrorista com armas químicas, biológicas ou nucleares. Foi criado até um ministério especial para o assunto e cadê os planos de evacuação?

Saudações




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#68 Mensagem por Túlio » Dom Set 04, 2005 5:31 pm

Bom, Delmar, o ruim para eles acaba sendo bom para nós, lamentavelmente, embora não sejam o Bush nem o Dick Chenney e muito menos a Condoleeza Rice que levem as pauladas, aí seria o céu, não é mesmo?
Sobre catástrofes, tem uma muito pior já anunciada há tempos, na qual uma parte importante e riquíssima dos EEUU será literalmente submersa. Estamos falando da Califórnia, que fica sobre uma emenda de placas tectônicas ou coisa que valha, as quais, quando se moverem, arrasarão com tudo... Os cientistas deles advertem faz um tempão para isso, que é uma CERTEZA, não uma possibilidade e o governo, ó, não faz necas, acho que nem dá, imaginem evacuar permanentemente a parte mais rica dos EEUU... :twisted: :twisted: :twisted: :twisted: :twisted:




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#69 Mensagem por mpina41 » Dom Set 04, 2005 5:49 pm

Fonte Lusa
http://www.lusa.pt


Presidente venezuelano aumenta ajuda às vítimas do furacão Katrina


O presidente venezuelano, Hugo Chávez, vai enviar um milhão de barris de gasolina para os Estados Unidos e elevou para cinco milhões de dólares a ajuda humanitária destinada às vítimas do furacão Katrina.

Chávez também criticou os Estados Unidos por não estarem preparados para lidar com a passagem do furacão, que estava prevista e que deverá ter causado milhares de mortos, desalojou dezenas de milhar de pessoas e levou a perdas materiais elevadíssimas.

A verba que a Venezuela vai disponibilizar destina-se à criação de um hospital de campanha e à aquisição de água e bens de primeira necessidade, dada a situação dos desalojados do Katrina, que mereceu críticas de Hugo Chávez.

O chefe de Estado venezuelano assinalou que a administração Bush o chama de "tirano" e acusa o seu governo de "não lutar contra as drogas e afundar o país na pobreza", mas, afinal, acabou por deixar os cidadãos norte-americanos entregues a si mesmos perante a catástrofe.

"Quem pretende governar o mundo e não responde às necessidades do seu próprio povo?", questionou Chávez, sublinhando que os EUA reduziram a verba destinada à acção social para investir no sector militar, com vista a "invadir o Irão, a Coreia do Norte e a Venezuela".


Ainda a propósito do Katrina, o presidente venezuelano chamou a atenção para a necessidade de reflectir sobre as mudanças climáticas inesperadas, e lembrou que George W. Bush se recusou a assinar o Protocolo de Quioto, que visa reduzir a emissão de gases poluentes




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Quem olha para o seu passado e não descobre nada que se arrependa de ter feito...
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Que, em nada evoluiu!
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#70 Mensagem por P44 » Seg Set 05, 2005 4:42 am

http://www.leagueofthesouth.net/blog/weblog.php

http://www.lewrockwell.com/roberts/roberts119.html

How New Orleans Was Lost

by Paul Craig Roberts

Chalk up the city of New Orleans as a cost of Bush’s Iraq war.

There were not enough helicopters to repair the breeched levees and rescue people trapped by rising water. Nor are there enough Louisiana National Guards available to help with rescue efforts and to patrol against looting.

The situation is the same in Mississippi.

The National Guard and helicopters are off on a fools mission in Iraq.

The National Guard is in Iraq because fanatical neoconservatives in the Bush administration were determined to invade the Middle East and because the incompetent Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld refused to listen to the generals, who told him there were not enough regular troops available to do the job.

After the invasion, the arrogant Rumsfeld found out that the generals were right. The National Guard was called up to fill in the gaping gaps.

Now the Guardsmen, trapped in the Iraqi quagmire, are watching on TV the families they left behind trapped by rising waters and wondering if the floating bodies are family members. None know where their dislocated families are, but, shades of Fallujah, they do see their destroyed homes.

The mayor of New Orleans was counting on helicopters to put in place massive sandbags to repair the levee. However, someone called the few helicopters away to rescue people from rooftops. The rising water overwhelmed the massive pumping stations, and New Orleans disappeared under deep water.

What a terrible casualty of the Iraqi war – one of our oldest and most beautiful cities, a famous city, a historic city.

Distracted by its phony war on terrorism, the US government had made no preparations in the event Hurricane Katarina brought catastrophe to New Orleans. No contingency plan existed. Only now after the disaster are FEMA and the Corp of Engineers trying to assemble the material and equipment to save New Orleans from the fate of Atlantis.

Even worse, articles in the New Orleans Times-Picayune and public statements by emergency management chiefs in New Orleans make it clear that the Bush administration slashed the funding for the Corp of Engineers’ projects to strengthen and raise the New Orleans levees and diverted the money to the Iraq war.

Walter Maestri, emergency management chief for Jefferson Parish, told the New Orleans Times-Picayune (June 8, 2004): "It appears that the money has been moved in the president’s budget to handle homeland security and the war in Iraq, and I suppose that’s the price we pay. Nobody locally is happy that the levees can’t be finished, and we are doing everything we can to make the case that this is a security issue for us."

Why can’t the US government focus on America’s needs and leave other countries alone? Why are American troops in Iraq instead of protecting our own borders from a mass invasion by illegal immigrants? Why are American helicopters blowing up Iraqi homes instead of saving American homes in New Orleans?

How can the Bush administration be so incompetent as to expose Americans at home to dire risks by exhausting American resources in foolish foreign adventures? What kind of "homeland security" is this?

All Bush has achieved by invading Iraq is to kill and wound thousands of people while destroying America’s reputation. The only beneficiaries are oil companies capitalizing on a good excuse to jack up the price of gasoline and Osama bin Laden’s recruitment.

What we have is a Republican war for oil company profits while New Orleans sinks beneath the waters.



Felizmente que AINDA há Americanos com Cérebro :!:

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    :arrow: Em 2002, os FUNDOS destinados á Conservação e Melhoramentos dos diques de New Orleans foram DESVIADOS PELO GOVERNO FEDERAL DE BUSH para a INVASÃO E OCUPAÇÃO ILEGAIS DO IRAQUE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!




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#71 Mensagem por P44 » Seg Set 05, 2005 6:27 am

No seguimento do que postei anteriormente...

Why the Levee Broke

By Will Bunch, Attytood. Posted September 1, 2005.

Washington knew exactly what needed to be done to protect the citizens of New Orleans from disasters like Katrina. Yet federal funding for Louisiana flood control projects was diverted to pay for the war in Iraq.

Even though Hurricane Katrina has moved well north of the city, the waters continued to rise in New Orleans on Wednesday. That's because Lake Pontchartrain continues to pour through a two-block-long break in the main levee, near the city's 17th Street Canal. With much of the Crescent City some 10 feet below sea level, the rising tide may not stop until until it's level with the massive lake.

There have been numerous reports of bodies floating in the poorest neighborhoods of this poverty-plagued city, but the truth is that the death toll may not be known for days, because the conditions continue to frustrate rescue efforts.

New Orleans had long known it was highly vulnerable to flooding and a direct hit from a hurricane. In fact, the federal government has been working with state and local officials in the region since the late 1960s on major hurricane and flood relief efforts. When flooding from a massive rainstorm in May 1995 killed six people, Congress authorized the Southeast Louisiana Urban Flood Control Project, or SELA.

Over the next 10 years, the Army Corps of Engineers, tasked with carrying out SELA, spent $430 million on shoring up levees and building pumping stations, with $50 million in local aid. But at least $250 million in crucial projects remained, even as hurricane activity in the Atlantic Basin increased dramatically and the levees surrounding New Orleans continued to subside.

Yet after 2003, the flow of federal dollars toward SELA dropped to a trickle. The Corps never tried to hide the fact that the spending pressures of the war in Iraq, as well as homeland security -- coming at the same time as federal tax cuts -- was the reason for the strain. At least nine articles in the Times-Picayune from 2004 and 2005 specifically cite the cost of Iraq as a reason for the lack of hurricane- and flood-control dollars.

Newhouse News Service, in an article posted late Tuesday night at The Times-Picayune Web site, reported: "No one can say they didn't see it coming. ... Now in the wake of one of the worst storms ever, serious questions are being asked about the lack of preparation."

In early 2004, as the cost of the conflict in Iraq soared, President Bush proposed spending less than 20 percent of what the Corps said was needed for Lake Pontchartrain, according to this Feb. 16, 2004, article, in New Orleans CityBusiness:

The $750 million Lake Pontchartrain and Vicinity Hurricane Protection project is another major Corps project, which remains about 20% incomplete due to lack of funds, said Al Naomi, project manager. That project consists of building up levees and protection for pumping stations on the east bank of the Mississippi River in Orleans, St. Bernard, St. Charles and Jefferson parishes.

The Lake Pontchartrain project is slated to receive $3.9 million in the president's 2005 budget. Naomi said about $20 million is needed.

"The longer we wait without funding, the more we sink," he said. "I've got at least six levee construction contracts that need to be done to raise the levee protection back to where it should be (because of settling). Right now I owe my contractors about $5 million. And we're going to have to pay them interest."

On June 8, 2004, Walter Maestri, emergency management chief for Jefferson Parish, Louisiana, told the Times-Picayune: "It appears that the money has been moved in the president's budget to handle homeland security and the war in Iraq, and I suppose that's the price we pay. Nobody locally is happy that the levees can't be finished, and we are doing everything we can to make the case that this is a security issue for us."

That June, with the 2004 hurricane seasion starting, the Corps' Naomi went before a local agency, the East Jefferson Levee Authority, and essentially begged for $2 million for urgent work that Washington was now unable to pay for. From the June 18, 2004 Times-Picayune:

"The system is in great shape, but the levees are sinking. Everything is sinking, and if we don't get the money fast enough to raise them, then we can't stay ahead of the settlement," he said. "The problem that we have isn't that the levee is low, but that the federal funds have dried up so that we can't raise them."

The panel authorized that money, and on July 1, 2004, it had to pony up another $250,000 when it learned that stretches of the levee in Metairie had sunk by four feet. The agency had to pay for the work with higher property taxes. The levee board noted in October 2004 that the feds were also now not paying for a hoped-for $15 million project to better shore up the banks of Lake Pontchartrain.

The 2004 hurricane season was the worst in decades. In spite of that, the federal government came back this spring with the steepest reduction in hurricane- and flood-control funding for New Orleans in history. Because of the proposed cuts, the Corps office there imposed a hiring freeze. Officials said that money targeted for the SELA project -- $10.4 million, down from $36.5 million -- was not enough to start any new jobs. According to New Orleans CityBusiness this June 5:

The district has identified $35 million in projects to build and improve levees, floodwalls and pumping stations in St. Bernard, Orleans, Jefferson and St. Charles parishes. Those projects are included in a Corps line item called Lake Pontchartrain, where funding is scheduled to be cut from $5.7 million this year to $2.9 million in 2006. Naomi said it's enough to pay salaries but little else.

"We'll do some design work. We'll design the contracts and get them ready to go if we get the money. But we don't have the money to put the work in the field, and that's the problem," Naomi said.

There was, at the same time, a growing recognition that more research was needed to see what New Orleans must do to protect itself from a Category 4 or 5 hurricane. But once again, the money was not there. As the Times-Picayune reported last Sept. 22:

That second study would take about four years to complete and would cost about $4 million, said Army Corps of Engineers project manager Al Naomi. About $300,000 in federal money was proposed for the 2005 fiscal-year budget, and the state had agreed to match that amount.

But the cost of the Iraq war forced the Bush administration to order the New Orleans district office not to begin any new studies, and the 2005 budget no longer includes the needed money, he said.

The Senate was seeking to restore some of the SELA funding cuts for 2006. But now it's too late. One project that a contractor had been racing to finish this summer was a bridge and levee job right at the 17th Street Canal, site of the main breach on Monday. The levee failure appears to be causing a human tragedy of epic proportions: "We probably have 80 percent of our city under water; with some sections of our city the water is as deep as 20 feet. Both airports are underwater," Mayor Ray Nagin told a radio interviewer.

The Newhouse News Service article published Tuesday night observed, "The Louisiana congressional delegation urged Congress earlier this year to dedicate a stream of federal money to Louisiana's coast, only to be opposed by the White House. ... In its budget, the Bush administration proposed a significant reduction in funding for southeast Louisiana's chief hurricane protection project. Bush proposed $10.4 million, a sixth of what local officials say they need."

Washington knew that this day could come at any time, and it knew the things that needed to be done to protect the citizens of New Orleans. But in the tradition of the riverboat gambler, the Bush administration decided to roll the dice on its fool's errand in Iraq, and on a tax cut that mainly benefitted the rich. Now Bush has lost that gamble, big time.

The president told us that we needed to fight in Iraq to save lives here at home. Yet -- after moving billions of domestic dollars to the Persian Gulf -- there are bodies floating through the streets of Louisiana. What does George W. Bush have to say for himself now?




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#72 Mensagem por Guerra » Seg Set 05, 2005 7:59 am

Patton escreveu:


Tem alguma pessoa aqui que reconhece a realidade?


Não, só você...o restante ainda não foi acordado pelo Morfeu!!!




A HONESTIDADE É UM PRESENTE MUITO CARO, NÃO ESPERE ISSO DE PESSOAS BARATAS!
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#73 Mensagem por Rui Elias Maltez » Seg Set 05, 2005 10:45 am

Caro Patton:

Sem querer interferir na política interna dos EUA, onde você vive, não lhe parece que em qualquer sociedade ocidental e do mundo há ricos, remediados e excluídos, que por diversos motivos que não podem ser catalogados de forma tão simplisita como você o fez precisa, de ajuda?

A função de um estado não é só governar para o mundo, e construir em série CVN Nimitz e Arleigh Burke.

Nem dizer que os pobres são parasitas e dependentes do Estado.

Se há drogados, que politicas socias há em curso para combater essa forma de exclusão social e tratar os toxico-dependentes?

Há outras coisa que pode e deve fazer, sem "ses" e sem, "mas" mas porque tem que o fazer nomeadamente ajudar quem mais precisa, em vez de os marginalizar.

Porque por cada rico, há 10 pobres que se esfalfam a trabalhar para ajudar esse rico a ficar mais rico ainda, enquanto este lhes paga vencimentos de miséria.

Quanto ganha uma pessoa com 4 filhos que tem que trabalhar nos EUA em 2 empregos para os alimentar, se forem empregos desqualificados, tipo de dia numa fábrica e há noite numa loja de conveniência tipo seven-eleven?

Quanto ao outros, os excluídos, não são parasitas do Estado, mas sim, o Estado é parasita dos que trabalham e descontam, se em vez de uma verdadeira política social de ataque aos pontos e factores de exclusão e pobreza, se limitar a invadir e atacar países com falsos argumentos.

Se calhar é por causa de visões como essa que você exprimiu aqui, que os EUA estão a ficar cada vez mais divorciados do resto do mundo.

E o mais incrícvel é que no seu ego-centrismo nem percebem porque é que o mundo cada vez olha com menos simpatias para esse modo de pensar americano.

Se calhar é por isso que aceita um cheque de 125 mil dólares do Afeganistão ou de 25 mil dólares do Sri Lanka, que ainda está a recuperar do Tsunami de 26 de Dezembro, enquanto se prapara para lançar à água mais um Nimitz.




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#74 Mensagem por P44 » Seg Set 05, 2005 10:50 am

SGT GUERRA escreveu:
Patton escreveu:


Tem alguma pessoa aqui que reconhece a realidade?


Não, só você...o restante ainda não foi acordado pelo Morfeu!!!


Nope, nós somos todos idiotas mesmo...

:roll:

Mas eu espero um dia receber a "ILUMINAÇÃO" divina...

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:oops: É triste viver na ignorância...




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#75 Mensagem por P44 » Seg Set 05, 2005 12:06 pm

http://www.cnn.com/2005/WEATHER/09/03/katrina.castro/

Castro offers medical aid to U.S.

Saturday, September 3, 2005; Posted: 4:33 a.m. EDT (08:33 GMT)

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HAVANA, Cuba (CNN) -- Cuban President Fidel Castro has offered to send help to the United States in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.

At a nightly roundtable program on state-run television Friday, the Cuban leader said his nation was ready to send 1,100 doctors and 26 tons of medicine and equipment.

"Others have sent money; we are offering to save lives," he said.

Castro -- an enemy of U.S. President George W. Bush and frequent subject of condemnation from the White House -- said he would not comment on the U.S. government's response to the tragedy because "this is not the time to kick an adversary -- while he's down."

Castro said the doctors he was offering have international experience.

The United States has no diplomatic relations with Cuba. It remained unclear whether the White House would take Castro up on his offer.

After a massive earthquake in Bam, Iran, in December 2003, the United States sent aid -- even though the United States has no diplomatic ties with Iran.


................

http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/WO0509/S00049.htm

Castro Reiterates Aid Offer To Katrina Victims
Sunday, 4 September 2005, 10:07 am
Press Release: Fidel Castro

President Fidel Castro Reiterates Medical Care Offer To The American People In His Remarks During The TV Round Table.
Our country is ready to send, in the small hours of morning, 100 clinicians and specialists in Comprehensive General Medicine, who at dawn tomorrow, Saturday, could be in Houston International Airport, Texas, the closest to the region struck by the tragedy, in order to be transferred by air, sea or river to the isolated shelters, facilities and neighborhoods in the city of New Orleans, where the population and families are that require emergency medical care or first aid.

These Cuban personnel would be carrying backpacks with 24 kilograms of medications, known to be essential in such situations to save lives, as well as basic diagnosis kits. They would be prepared to work alone or in groups of two or more, depending on the circumstances, for as long as necessary.

Likewise, Cuba is ready to send via Houston, or any other airport of your choosing, 500 additional specialists in Comprehensive General Medicine, with the same equipment, who could be at their destination point at noon or in the afternoon of tomorrow, Saturday, September 3.

A third group of 500 specialists in Comprehensive General Medicine could be arriving in the morning of Sunday, September 4. Thus, the 1100 said medical doctors, with the resources described tantamount to 26.4 tons of medications and diagnosis kits, would be caring for the neediest persons in the aftermath of hurricane Katrina.

These medical doctors have the necessary international experience and elementary knowledge of the English language that would allow them to communicate with the patients.

We stand ready waiting for the US authorities’ response.


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http://story.philippinetimes.com/p.x/ct ... cc730d258c
Sunday, September 04, 2005


Philippines sends team to aid Katrina victims


The government will send a 25-man medical and engineering team to the United States to help in relief operations for thousands of victims of Hurricane Katrina that devastated a number of states in the US Gulf Coast.

“The first 10 members, consisting of doctors, nurses and sanitary engineers, are scheduled to leave early next week,” the President’s spokesman and press secretary, Ignacio Bunye, said on Saturday.

In sending the medical mission Bunye said the President noted that the United States is an ally, which has never hesitated to help Filipinos in times of calamity.

“The Filipino people feel the anguish the Americans are experiencing in the aftermath of the disaster,” Bunye quoted the President as saying.

The Philippine National Red Cross said on Saturday that it will send $25,000 in aid to the victims of Katrina.

The Philippine’s Red Cross chair, Sen. Richard Gordon, said the money will be sent through the American Red Cross.

“We are answering the call to help our brethren who have been devastatingly affected by the disaster,” Gordon said in a statement.

He said he will also send medical and post-trauma stress debriefing teams if requested by US Red Cross authorities.

Bunye said the Departments of Foreign Affairs and Labor and Employment were coordinating with their US counterparts to determine if there were Filipinos among the hurricane victims.

Nations around the world are offering aid to the United States, with donations coming from old friends like Britain and old foes like Cuba alike.

The world is holding out its hands to a superpower in crisis, offering hurricane disaster aid ranging from a French offer of ships and aircraft to a $25,000 donation by tsunami-pounded Sri Lanka.

Offers streamed in after the United States, the world’s biggest single aid donor, said it would be open to assistance though it was not making an appeal for foreign aid.

US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice expressed the United States’ “heartfelt” gratitude for the offers of aid that have poured in from around the world following Hurricane Katrina.

“We’ve turned down no offers,” Rice said in a news conference, when asked about rumors that Washington had refused help from Russia and France.

Even Cuban President Fidel Castro chipped in, offering 1,100 doctors as well as 26 tons of medicines to treat the victims of Hurricane Katrina.

Scenes of chaos—explosions and fires erupting in New Orleans, Louisiana, looters on the rampage, bodies in the streets and refugees crammed into a stinking squalor in the city’s Superdome—prompted an outpouring of shock and sympathy.

The world’s industrialized countries agreed Friday to tap their strategic oil reserves and pour 60 million barrels into the market in a month to cope with disruptions in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

The International Energy Agency said that all its 26 member states had agreed to take “collective action in response to the interrupted oil supplies in the Gulf of Mexico caused by Hurricane Katrina,” the Paris-based agency reported in a statement.
--William B. Depasupil , AP and AFP


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http://sify.com/news/fullstory.php?id=13932807

Bangladesh to give $1 m as Katrina relief


Monday, 05 September , 2005, 10:36

Dhaka: Bangladesh said on Monday that it was donating one million dollars worth of humanitarian aid to the victims of Hurricane Katrina that slammed into the US Gulf coast a week ago causing massive destruction. Read: PM announces $5 m as Katrina relief


"Prime Minister Begum Khaleda Zia has announced the government's decision to donate (one million dollars) for the victims of the natural disaster," foreign ministry spokesman Zahirul Haque told AFP.

Haque said this was the second time Bangladesh has given humanitarian aid to the United States after sending $100,000 to the US Red Cross Society in 1994 following a severe flood in the Midwest.

Bangladesh is one of poorest country's in the world, with half of its 140 million population living on less than a dollar a day.




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