Haiti Micah Project Launches Website

By Anonymous on Monday, September 26, 2005.

Haiti Innovation is pleased to announce the launch of the Haiti Micah Project Website. “The Haiti Micah Project is a nonprofit Christian organization committed to addressing the needs of impoverished and uneducated street children in Haiti by meeting their most basic needs - shelter, food, clean water, health care, education, vocational training and emotional well being.” Started in 2004, the Haiti Micah Project is meeting the needs of street children in the town of Mirebalais, by providing permanent housing, education, and most importantly, providing a safe and loving environment. Haiti Innovation is proud to support The Haiti Micah Project and the great work they are doing to help the street children of Haiti.Go to www.haiti-micah.org to learn more about the Haiti Micah Project and to find out how you can help. Read more »

IDB Approves $12.6 Million for Transportation Infrastructure in Haiti

By Anonymous on Tuesday, September 20, 2005.
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September 19, 2005 - The Inter-American Development Bank today announced the approval of $12.6 million in concessional financing to support Haiti’s efforts to rebuild its transportation infrastructure. The new resources will supplement a $50 million loan approved earlier this year. Read more »

Dominican Rep Pres: High Energy Costs Hamper Poor Nations

By Anonymous on Thursday, September 15, 2005.
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NEW YORK (AP)--The president of the Dominican Republic on Wednesday said rising world energy prices are having a disproportionate effect on the developing world, increasing the cost of essential goods and threatening the political stability of countries including his own. Read more »

USTDA Grants Support Haiti's Main International Airport

By Anonymous on Thursday, September 15, 2005.
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Below is a notice from the US Trade and Development Agency concerning grants to upgrade the Port au Prince airport.  It certainly cant hurt - we will keep you updated. Read more »

How to Make Ice Out of Thin Air

By Anonymous on Wednesday, September 14, 2005.
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When he isn't snowboarding or volunteering for Engineers Without Borders, Dave Williams spends his days thinking about something most of us take for granted: ice. As he discovered on a volunteer trip to Haiti in 2002, ice can be a godsend to a poor village, keeping fish fresh on a journey to market or preserving vaccines. Read more »

Helminth Infections in Haitian children

By Anonymous on Friday, September 9, 2005.
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Wuchereria Therapy; Efficacy of combined treatment of helminth infections examined

2005 SEP 9 - (NewsRx.com) -- Investigators have determined the tolerance and efficacy of combined diethylcarbamazine and albendazole for treatment of Wuchereria bancrofti and intestinal helminth infections in Haitian children. Read more »

Why the US Should Care about Haiti (Part 3)

By Anonymous on Sunday, September 4, 2005.
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Looking forward, we must consider the possibility that Haiti, by itself, may never stabilize, never see economic growth, and never pull itself from abject poverty. Let's look back on where Haiti has been for the last two decades. Since 1986, we have seen the last full year the Duvalier regime controlled Haiti; one dictator ousted by another and then again by another; the first democratic elections in Haiti's 180+ year history, which too were curtailed; a hemisphere-wide, economic embargo of Haiti that in retrospect only hurt the poor and not the junta; the second US occupation, (check out Hideous Dream by Stan Goff); tainted election after tainted election; and the evaporation of the Haitian military and the Legislative Branch. Needless to say, Haiti has seen much turmoil. Read more »

Why the US Should Care about Haiti (Part 2)

By Anonymous on Sunday, September 4, 2005.
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In getting Haiti to where it is today, it has had many internal and external actors. There is, of course, the horrific toll slavery took upon the Taino Indian population (eradicated by colonizers by the late 17th century) and blacks taken from West Africa to replace them. In 1825, Haitian President Jean-Pierre Boyer conceded to French demands to pay reparations for the property and investment colonizers had lost due to Haitian independence. Boyer, afraid of invasion, agreed. This sum, which has been valued at more then $21 billion in today’s money, crippled Haiti’s economy as it stripped the countryside in order to make payments. Read more »

Why the US Should Care about Haiti (Part 1)

By Anonymous on Friday, September 2, 2005.
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Why should the US government and people have Haiti's back?

There are three main bodies of thought with regard to why the United States should pay attention to Haiti; first, is the humanitarian reason; second, the guilt or responsibility reason; and third the forethought and pragmatic reason. I will only briefly address each, as there has been great effort into researching these topics already. Read more »

Who Has Haiti's Back?

By Anonymous on Thursday, September 1, 2005.
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Prime Minister Gerard Latortue. Interim Government of Haiti (IGH). What a sight. Rarely ever seen, these two phrases, just as you see them above. They are always cluttered with the phrase, "U.S. backed", and wrongly I'll add. "I've got your back." Read more »