Thursday, March 24, 2011

'Baby Doc' Duvalier hospitalized in Haiti

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti --
                                                                                        Former Haitian dictator Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier has been hospitalized after having chest pains, his longtime companion and associates said Thursday without giving details about his condition.
Duvalier, who made a surprise return to the Caribbean nation in January, was admitted Wednesday night, companion Veronique Roy said as she took a break from visiting him at the Canape Vert hospital in the hills above downtown Port-au-Prince.
Roy declined to discuss his condition in detail. Asked if it was serious, she replied only, "I hope not."
Enzo Alcindor, a Duvalier family friend who was with them at the hospital, said doctors planned more tests but it wasn't clear yet when he would be released.
The 59-year-old former dictator made an abrupt return to Haiti in January after 25 years in exile and has appeared at times to move with difficulty, sparking speculation that he has been ill.
He has been living in a villa in the hills above Port-au-Prince under police guard as a judge investigates whether he can be charged with a long list of crimes, including corruption and torture, committed while he was "president for life" in the impoverished Caribbean nation.

There have been no restrictions on his movement and he has been spotted attending a jazz concert in Petionville and has been receiving a stream of visitors at the house.
Roy said a court clerk served an order on Duvalier confining him to the villa but they planned to appeal.
Duvalier was ousted in a popular uprising against what was widely considered a brutal and corrupt regime. He assumed power in 1971 at age 19 following the death of his notorious father, Francois "Papa Doc" Duvalier.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

By TRENTON DANIEL
    ,03.24.11, 05:47 PM EDT


Haiti's electoral council says election results to be relased on time

Haiti's Provisional Electoral Council (CEP) on Wednesday said it will release preliminary results from Sunday's presidential elections by the end of the month.

Two days after Sunday's run-off vote for Haiti's new president the CEP have counted more than 25 percent of the votes, said CEP Operations Director Louiner Jean Marie.

Jean Marie said representatives of both presidential candidates are following the process and votes from most of the voting centers on the Caribbean island have already been suibmitted to Haiti's election authorites.

The preliminary results are scheduled to be released on March 31 while final results are due on April 16.

Sylvie van den Wildenberg, spokeswoman for the United Nations Peace Mission in Haiti (Minustah), meanwhile said 97 percent of the votes have been delivered to the CEP Counting Center, The Minustah mission is involved in the transportation of the electoral material.

Both the Minustah, the Organization of American States (OAS) and the Caribbean Community (Caricom) are in charge of supervising the counting of votes to ensure a transparent process.

In the March 20 elections Haitians voted between former first lady Miralnde Manigat and popular singer Michel Martelly. Haiti's new leader will replace current President Rene Preval in an inauguration ceremony scheduled for May.

Source: Xinhua
 


Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Honeywell Opens the Largest School in Southeast Region of Haiti

Nine-Building, 40,000 sq. ft. Complex, Serving More Than 600 Local Children, Rises Just Seven Months After Groundbreaking Following Devastating January 2010 Earthquake
JACMEL, Haiti, March 23, 2011 /PRNewswire/ — Honeywell (NYSE: HON) Chairman and CEO Dave Cote and Honeywell Hometown Solutions President Tom Buckmaster recently joined students, parents, teachers, school administrators and community leaders to open Ecole Nationale Jacob Martin Henriquez, a new, state-of-the-art public school in the hard hit city of Jacmel in southern Haiti.  The nine-building school complex will provide a new educational home and free meals to more than 600 local children in grades K through 7.
The school was built using contemporary, sustainable building methods and is designed to withstand any potential future earthquakes.  Honeywell used the school’s construction to train local builders in modern earthquake-resistant construction and environmentally-conscious techniques that can save Haiti both money and natural resources in the years to come. Honeywell has established a scholarship fund in partnership with Operation USA to help cover the cost of books, uniforms and other student expenses.
“Working together with Operation USA, Mayor Edwin Zenny, and the City of Jacmel, we have delivered on our commitment to rebuild creating a terrific community asset and environment for learning just 7 months after we broke ground,” said Cote. “This is one of the largest post quake rebuilding projects completed in Haiti so far.  Haiti’s children have been profoundly affected and we are gratified to be able to help Haiti continue their education and to play a meaningful role in improving the learning environment.”
Jacmel, a seaside town with a population of 80,000 and located 45km from the epicenter of the earthquake, saw an estimated 80% of its buildings either damaged or destroyed, with the most severe devastation in the poorer neighborhoods. Before its destruction, Ecole JM Henriquez — one of the few free schools available to the city’s children — served 400 students between the ages of 7 and 17.  The new school complex, which sits on one and a half acres overlooking the bay of Jacmel, will offer 600 K-7 students a new, free educational home featuring a computer lab, library, cafeteria, administration building, six classroom buildings, a sustainable community garden and an athletic field.
Immediately following the earthquake, Honeywell committed $1 million in aid to Haiti, including a 100 percent match of employee donations, to fund rebuilding projects.  Honeywell also made business jets available to relief agency Operation USA for airlift support to deliver medical supplies and transport medical staff.
In an effort to promote good health and nutrition while also incentivizing school enrollment and thereby enhancing literacy rates, a feeding program was developed for all students attending the school. At the core of the program is a community garden on the school grounds. The garden will be cultivated and maintained by the students, their families, and school staff. All produce grown in the gardens will be used in the daily meal provided to the children. These “learning gardens” will integrate practices of resource management, basic horticulture, water harvesting, composting, and small animal husbandry.
The government of Haiti estimates that approximately 230,000 people were killed and over 300,000 injured in the massive January 2010 earthquake, including 38,000 students, more than 1,300 teachers and other education personnel.  Over 4,000 schools and the Ministry of Education’s headquarters were destroyed, and all available data on education was lost. An estimated three million students are believed to have suffered an interruption to, or complete cessation of, their educations. Only 50% of the children living in resettlement camps and relocation sites attend school.
SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION FACTS:
Nine Buildings
40,375 Square Feet
15 Classrooms
10 Bathrooms
5 Showers
20 Computers
600 Students Capacity
Average building is 416 sq ft (largest 540 sq ft)
Total Construction Workers Employed: 500+
Number of masons trained in U.S. standards and protocols: 200
Number of engineers trained in U.S. standards and protocols: 35
Foundations:
Built of reinforced concrete
Cell Masonry:
Used 2-cell masonry blocks, which are less susceptible to breakage, accept the vertical steel elements and additional concrete, and have higher compressive strength.
Wall Reinforcement:
Horizontal and vertical steel in the masonry to take the lateral (horizontal) and gravity (vertical) loadings on the wall.
Placement of horizontal and vertical reinforcement in the masonry walls.
Provides for a redundant system where the walls act as hundreds of columns and also are reinforced to take the lateral loading from earthquakes and wind.
Long Span Roof:
Steel used throughout roof and tied to walls
Roof has drop beams at 3M on center and a 5” slab that spans between them.  This roof structure will span the 10.5M distance and allow for overhangs on both ends.
Creates a “cage” for the entire building and distributes weight more evenly to the walls.
The slope of the roof allows for drainage and also for ventilation and natural light into the classroom


Coast Guard repatriates 91 Haitian migrants


MIAMI – Crewmembers from the Coast Guard Cutter Spencer repatriated 91 Haitian migrants to Cap Haitien, Haiti, Tuesday.
The 91 Haitian migrants were interdicted during two separate incidents since Friday.
While conducting a routine patrol in the Caribbean Sea, Spencer crewmembers located a 40-foot sail freighter east of Great Inagua, Bahamas, Friday. Spencer crewmembers safely embarked the 90 Haitian migrants without incident.
Also on Friday, Spencer crewmembers received notification of a disabled 24-foot go-fast vessel north of Great Inagua from a Coast Guard Air Station Clearwater, Fla., MH-60 Jayhawk helicopter crew deployed to Providenciales, Turks and Caicos Islands, in support of Operation Bahamas, Turks and Caicos (OPBAT).
The Spencer crew arrived on scene with the disabled vessel to discover one Haitian migrant and 11 Dominicans. The Dominicans were transferred to Royal Bahamas Defence Force personnel Sunday.
Once aboard a Coast Guard cutter, migrants are given food, water, shelter and basic medical care.
 The Spencer is a 270-foot medium-endurance cutter homeported in Boston.

Vermont delegation optimistic about Haiti


Haiti’s recovery from a massive earthquake in early 2010 has been painstakingly slow, but progress is being made, two members of Vermont’s congressional delegation visiting the island nation said in a telephone news conference Tuesday.
“I have real hope for the future,” Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., said after he and Rep. Peter Welch, D-Vt., toured areas around the devastated capital of Port-au-Prince. “I am far more hopeful after this trip here than I was before I came down.”

Welch agreed but said it was hard to see the damage the earthquake had done to a country that was already struggling with extreme poverty. The January 2010 earthquake measured 7.0 on the Richter scale, flattened much of Port-au-Prince and killed more than 222,000 people.

“It was something I was not able to fully appreciate by reading about it,” Welch said of the earthquake’s impact. “I’m not sure I can fully appreciate it by seeing it. ... The complexity of life here is immense — just the traffic snarls and the challenge of getting from here to there.”

Leahy and Welch spent the day visiting a medical center where youths who lost limbs during the earthquake were being fitted with prostheses, observing a “rubble removal site” and meeting with American aid workers and Haitian officials, including Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive.

“There’s an immense amount of suffering that you see, but what you also see is enormous amount of hope,” Welch said. “People are going about their business. They’re cleaning up the rubble, they do set up medical care facilities. They do get their kids to school.”

Leahy estimated that about 25 percent of the $1 billion the United States has dedicated to the recovery effort has been spent and said he was told that American officials were monitoring the release of the remainder of the money in order to make sure the money was not misspent.

“The concern I heard from a lot of the Haitian officials was that ‘You — the United States — have lot of things going on around the world. There’s Japan, Libya, two wars. Don’t forget us as we try to rebuild, as we try to bring people back. It cannot be done overnight.’”

Leahy and Welch said they were encouraged that the presidential election held in the country last weekend appeared to have been conducted properly and that the anticipated winner appears to be someone who will have the confidence of the Haitian people.

According to polling, entertainer Michel Martelly was the frontrunner in the contest. His closest challenger was the nation’s 70-year-old former first lady Mirlande Manigat, who is also a law professor. Results of the voting are expected to be made public next week.

“They are going to have to have a government that cares as much about the people as it does about itself,” Leahy said. “For decades, that has not been the case in Haiti.”

The two were joined for part of their tour by actor Sean Penn, who has spent months on the island helping Haitians recover from the devastation.

“I’m impressed with him,” Leahy said. “I have a lot of movie actors, entertainers who want to come in and see me because they’ve adopted the issue of the day, usually for the day, and I usually say no. He’s lived here for month after month after month. ... That’s why I’ll continue to work with him.”

Contact Sam Hemingway at 660-1850 or e-mail atshemingway@burlingtonfreepress.com. Get news updates from the Free Press via Facebook at www.facebook.com/bfpnews.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Haiti - Elections : Prohibition to publish the voting trends, illegal !

Leaders of civil society organizations involved in the observation of election last Sunday: National Council of Observation (CNO), the Haitian Council of Non State Actors (CONHANE) and the Civil Society Initiative (ISC) have described as illegal the decision of Provisional Electoral Council (CEP) taken Sunday evening, prohibiting the publication of voting trends before the official publication of the preliminary results [March 31].

Noel Laguerre of the National Council of Observation (CNO) asserts that "This is not a legal decision". However, in order to collaborate with the CEP and avoid misinterpretation, he indicated that his institution will not release information on this subject.

Rosny Desroche, director of the Civil Society Initiative (ISC), also qualifies as illegal the measure of the CEP to ban any publication of trends, noting that "the electoral law does not prohibit the publication of voting trends" recalling that "the minutes of the counts are public because they are displayed in the the voting centers."

Edouard Paultre, Responsible of the Haitian Council of Non State Actors (CONHANE) advised that "it is an unusual decision without legal basis". He recalled that around the world, trends are known only a few hours after the close of the polling stations. According to him, if the results are displayed, trends can be known and published.

It is good to clarify that vote trends, are representative only: if they are in relation with the number of polling stations concerned, the number of voters and the percentage that these data represent on the total of the electorate at the national level.

HL/ HaitiLibre


Haitian immigrant-filled robotics team earns contest berth with winning robot

Building robots at school wasn't something Margely Saint-Pierre could have ever imagined back home in Haiti, even before his high school was destroyed in last year's devastating earthquake.
But at the It Takes a Village Academy in East Flatbush, he's a member of a robotics team that's made up almost entirely of Haitian immigrants like him, and it feels like a family.
The students just won the chance to enter their robot in a prestigious competition in St. Louis, but they need to raise money to pay for the trip.
"It's like a dream come true," said Margely, 17, who saw 10 friends die in the aftermath of last year's earthquake before his parents sent him to stay with his uncle, a police officer who lives in Canarsie.
The junior with an 80 average is just one of a dozen students on the school's robotics team who emigrated from Haiti - half of them since the earthquake.
Two weeks ago, their robot took first place in a competition at the Javits Center by outperforming robots from 63 other schools from around the country, including big-name city schools such as Stuyvesant and Dalton.
They're one of just two public school teams from the city invited to the FIRST Tech Challenge next month, where 100 schools around the world will compete to see who can build the fastest and most precise robot.
The invitation is an honor for Margely and all the students on the It Takes a Village robotics team - but, more importantly, the kids have used their team to help each other adjust to their new lives in America.
"They're like brothers and sisters, sharing experiences," said Yvon Morin, a computer science teacher who serves as the team's coach, and who's also a Haitian immigrant.
The kids spend three afternoons a week working on their robot in the after-school program funded by the Brooklyn Community Foundation.
They sometimes speak Creole as they talk about their work, the lives they left behind and the new challenges they face in Brooklyn.
They're learning computer programming, math and physics as they work to perfect their creation, which can navigate a maze on its own and looks like an Erector Set crossed with a remote-control car.
Competing in next month's tournament would be a chance for the young immigrants to make a statement as well as network with college reps.
"We're going to show that we're Haitian and we've accomplished something really important," said team captain Christopher Leveille, 17, who emigrated to Canarsie from Port-au-Prince two years ago.
It will cost about $15,000 for the It Takes a Village team to attend the three-day St. Louis robotics competition, which starts on April 27.
To learn more or to make a donation, call (718) 260-3524 or (718) 629-2307, or visit www.bcfny.org.
                   
Nydailynews.com