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December 15, 2010 - POSTED BY Bianca Salvant POSTED IN Bloggies
PRINCE, Haiti — Michel Martelly, the presidential candidate whose partisans have fiercely protested election results they consider rigged, said in an interview on Friday that he had rejected an offer to participate in a runoff election as a third candidate. “This would be like fraud to be in a second round by invitation,” he said. “I want to either win or lose.” VIA NYTIMES.COM LOL at this pride! At a time like this, there should be NO room for pride. Your people are in trouble and they need HELP--put yourself to the side and think of the masses! But of course, he "wants to either win or lose." December 14, 2010 - POSTED BY Bianca Salvant POSTED IN Bloggies
The cholera outbreak in Haiti doesn't appear to be getting any better. Because of the growing death toll, they have now created massive grave holes that they will put the dead bodies because the community cemetery refuses to take them. Talk about a sentimental funeral. Psh. December 12, 2010 - POSTED BY Bianca Salvant POSTED IN Bloggies
Everyone knows that the Catholic Church disagrees with the use of condoms because according to them, it's a sin because it isn't natural. The pope, of course, has agreed with this belief because in actuality...it's kind of his job. So when the pope recently stated that condoms were okay to use in certain situations, the public and media went crazy. Because the biggest question was: What situations exactly? Homosexual men. Yes, that is his exemption...in order to stop the spread of HIV, gay men should use condoms. So, what you are telling us is that in the year of 2010, you JUST figured this out? This is coming from the same man who said a few years ago that condoms may INCREASE the spread of HIV... Maybe he fell in love recently and so he had a revelation... But honestly, are you surprised at his exemption? lol ;)
December 12, 2010 - POSTED BY Bianca Salvant POSTED IN Bloggies
Haiti, for years, has been recognized as the poorest country in the Caribbean with nearly half of its population living in poverty. The reason behind this is rarely ever talked about. The people of the world neglect to ask "WHY?" such a country must endure such suffering and abandonment. Well, if you have never done the research yourself, here is a video that points it out very clearly. Haiti was smothered and no one wanted to help. Never stop educating yourself. In love, peace and happiness @_MixedBaby December 09, 2010 - POSTED BY Bianca Salvant POSTED IN Bloggies
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - Furious supporters of eliminated candidates set fires and put up barricades in the streets of Haiti's capital after officials announced that government protege Jude Celestin and former first lady Mirlande Manigat would advance to a runoff in presidential elections. The results announced late Tuesday were immediately questioned at home and abroad, threatening more unrest for a country wracked by a cholera epidemic and still recovering from a devastating Jan. 12 earthquake. Popular carnival singer Michel "Sweet Micky" Martelly trailed Celestin by about 6,800 votes - less than 1 percent, according to the results released by Haiti's Provisional Electoral Council. Martelly supporters set up flaming barricades near the Petionville restaurant where the tallies were announced and threw rocks at people passing nearby. Gunshots rang out and an Associated Press journalist was robbed. "If they don't give us Martelly and Manigat (in the second round), Haiti will be on fire," said a protester, Erick Jean. "We're still living under tents and Celestin wastes money on election posters." VIA HERALD-TRIBUNE.COM December 08, 2010 - POSTED BY Bianca Salvant POSTED IN Bloggies
Port-au-Prince, Haiti (CNN) -- A French doctor's report suggests that the strain of cholera ravaging Haiti may have originated with U.N. peacekeepers from Nepal, but U.N. officials and others cautioned that the report was inconclusive. The report by French epidemiologist Dr. Renaud Piarroux rules out a number of potential causes and points to the Nepalese soldiers as the most probable, said Vincenzo Pugliese, spokesman for the U.N. mission in Haiti, but it fails to deliver definitive proof. "We have not dismissed the report but we have not accepted it completely," he said. "We remain open to investigating this and we will get to the bottom of it." The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Dr. Eric Mintz said research seeking the origin of the deadly outbreak -- the death toll has now topped 2,000 since the first case was reported in mid-October -- is being undertaken around the world. "To date, I am aware of no evidence whatsoever that would suggest the strain in Haiti is unique to Nepal," Mintz said. "By the tests we have done here so far, this strain is indistinguishable from strains that have been seen in other countries in South Asia. Vibrio cholerae strains do not get their passports stamped when they cross an international border, and there are many strains in circulation around the globe at any given time." The first case was reported October 14 in the north of the country, near a camp of Nepalese peacekeepers, but Pugliese said he was unaware that Piarroux had ever visited the camp. More than 90,000 people have been sickened by the water-borne disease, according to Haiti's Ministry of Public Health. In his report, Piarroux -- who said his investigation lasted from November 7-27 -- said the first cases came from residents living near the Artibonite River and that many of the early victims were getting their water from that river or its tributaries, downriver from the U.N. peacekeeper camp. At one village, Piarroux said, residents told his team of pipes running from the camp to the river and that a nauseating substance flowed through the pipes. The residents said that military people removed the pipes, which they said came from a septic tank in the camp. Doctors from the U.N. mission tested the latrines at the base on October 21, but the tests were negative for cholera, he said. The doctors told him the tests were conducted while the pipes were open. "But it's impossible to know if the septic tank or the pipes had been disinfected before the samples were taken," Piarroux wrote. Piarroux noted the first cases of cholera were reported just days after a new battalion of soldiers arrived from Kathmandu, Nepal, on October 8 and 12. Kathmandu was experiencing a cholera outbreak at the time, he said, but doctors said none of the soldiers came forward with symptoms and that none of the samples collected from the camp registered positive for cholera. Piarroux, however, urgged caution in accepting those reports and suggested officials could have taken measures to erase any trace of cholera. While the epidemic began near the camp along the Artibonite tributary, Piarroux wrote, "massive contamination" of the river and its delta caused an explosion of the disease. Cases of the disease follow downriver in succession, he said, notably on October 19, when six communities 100 kilometers away from the initial outbreak -- all downriver -- experienced outbreaks. "This massive and widespread contamination across the entire delta and region of the Artibonite could only have been started by dumping a phenomenal amount of fecal material from infected people all at once," he wrote. And from those areas, he said, infected people carried the disease to other villages, where human-to-human transmission took place. Haiti was already reeling from the devastating 7.0 magnitude earthquake that hit the island nation on January 12, killing more than 220,000 dead, injuring more than 300,000 and leaving more than 1 million homeless. Last month, Hurricane Tomas brushed the island, dumping torrents of rain. Piarroux's expert report was submitted to the French Foreign Ministry, which said it had received the report and sent it on to the United Nations and the Haitian government. The Haitian government, however, said it had not seen the study. Several aid workers said they were concerned about the report's suggestions, given Haiti's currently volatile situation and stress that it is inclusive. Pugliese said the publicity surrounding the report was "a point of concern" that more violence against the peacekeepers could erupt as Haiti was already tense amid the pending announcement of election results, expected sometime Tuesday evening. Stefano Zannini, head of the Haiti mission for Medecins Sans Frontiers (Doctors Without Borders) said the stir over the cholera outbreak's origins was not as important as the battle against the intestinal disease. "One person is dying every 30 minutes in Haiti," Zannini said. "Knowing the origin of the epidemic has no impact on saving lives." VIA CNN.COM |
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