Former Presidents George Bush and Bill Clinton are arriving in Haiti this week to survey reconstruction needs following the 12 January earthquake. Haitian officials say less food aid and more jobs are needed to get the Haitian economy running again. Some major organizations are scaling back donation efforts beginning April 1st. But as VOA’s Steve Baragona reports, many Haitians are still in urgent need of food.
Actor, activist, and TransAfrica forum chair Danny Glover joins us just after returning from South Africa where he met with the ousted former Haitian President Jean Bertrand Aristide. Published with ‘written permission’ from democracynow.org. http://www.democracynow.org Provided to you under Democracy NOW! creative commons license. All credits for this video belong to democracynow.org the only independent news media. Please support Democracy NOW! with a Rating, Comment, Subscription.
This update covers the 5 top stories for YWAM Haiti in February. It shows:-How YWAM’s long standing work in Haiti gives them the platform to distribute food from the World Food Program.-The Mercy Trucks ambulance serves as a mobile clinic in Port-au-Prince-A supernatural healing by kids helping out around the New Beginnings clinic-the 3 days of prayer and repentance by Haitians who want to see a new beginning in Haiti-The long term plan of tent communties and how you could get involved in the near future Youth With A Mission began it’s first base in Haiti in 1991 in the city of Saint Marc. Since then, YWAM Haiti has grown to play a significant role in the city, doing projects such as sanatizing the beef market and building housing for the homeless out in the province. The vision has aways been the same from its 1st founding: to turn Haiti into a blessing! Based off of the Bible scripture in Zech. 8:13, YWAM looks for ways to not just preach or fill a humanitarian need, but to create the spiritual change needed to free this nation. For decades YWAM has recieved humanitarian aid, but without the spiritual change Haiti has remained the poorest nation of the Western Hemisphere. We believe that only through God can this nation change from a curse, to a blessing!Stay up to date on what Youth With A Mission is doing in Haiti by visiting www.ywamhaiti.org
Haitians are growing increasingly desperate waiting for food, water and medicine after a devastating earthquake killed an estimated 45,000 to 50,000 people and left the capital, Port-au-Prince in ruins. And here in the United States, Haitian-Americans in a number of communities worry about their relatives back home. Roxana Romero reports for VOA from Miami, Florida.