Blogs highlighting the work of staff and volunteers within the British Red Cross, part of the largest humanitarian organisation movement in the world.
March 3rd 2010
Katrina Crew | Posted in Emergencies, Health and social care | View Comments
Tags: emergency response, emergency response unit, ERU, Haiti, Haiti earthquake, haiti earthquake appeal, latrines, sanitation, toilets, water and sanitation
Cathy Ayer is part of a British Red Cross team in Haiti helping improve sanitation for earthquake survivors. She sent back this story on some of the more unusual ways they’ve found to make toilets fun.
Clowns. Funny guys that fall over a lot. Baggy pants. Little tricycles. Honking. More likely to be found in a circus than a camp for earthquake affected people. That was my experience of clowns until this morning when I attended a Red Cross hygiene promotion session in Automeca camp in Port Au Prince.
Automeca camp is currently home to approximately 10,000 people, densely populated in the centre of town with ramshshackle shelters squeezed tightly together. The British Red Cross sanitation team has been working in this camp for over 4 weeks for people made homeless by the earthquake. We have erected latrines and hand washing facilities so that people now have a safe and secure place to go to the loo. We have also undertaken a large hygiene promotion campaign with the residents of the camp. Hygiene promotion is all about delivering essential messages on how to maintain good hygiene to keep you and your family healthy, such as correct use of latrines, hand washing and storage of water. These things are absolutely vital…but is talking about going to the toilet sexy?
This is why hygiene promoters have to be extremely creative. They have to get the key messages out in such a way that it is interesting, engaging, clear, easily understood and makes people want to tell their friends and practice good hygiene. Today I saw Red Cross volunteers conducting a hygiene promotion session using glitter on people’s hands to demonstrate how harmful bacteria can be spread from person to person if they don’t wash their hands. They taught the people songs about why hygiene is good and everyone joined in singing and clapping their hands!
I then wandered over in to the centre of Automeca camp for the main attraction…the clowns! Liz, our hygiene promoter had found a group of local, professional performers, living in another camp in Port Au Prince, who have a clown act and she asked if they would join us to speak to the people in Automeca to promote hygiene. I was not sure what to expect…red noses? make up? Twirling bow ties? Instead I found something much more hilarious. A young guy dressed as an old man complete with white beard, an old man dressed as a baby (man size nappy included) and a scruffy clown with comedy breeches.
Hundreds of people gathered to see what was going to happen with these odd individuals. They had a loud speaker, and the girls in the group explained to the audience that they were here with the Red Cross to give them important information on health and hygiene, then the guys launched in to their fast paced comedy Creole routine. The “baby clown” spoke in a high pitched baby voice and had the crowd in hysterical laughter! The old man scolded the baby for not knowing how to use a latrine properly and instead invited the audience to contribute ideas on how it should be done properly. Members of the audience were pulled in to the act and everyone participated in agreeing what was good hygiene and what wasn’t.
Empowering people with the knowledge to keep themselves healthy in very difficult circumstances in these camps is very rewarding but what really touched me was the reaction of the kids to the clowns. Thousands of kids live in these camps across Haiti. Many will have lost parents and guardians, all are vulnerable and the trauma they experienced during the earthquake and since is hard to imagine. A group of hygiene promoting clowns is not going to take away all that trauma but if they can make them smile and laugh and perhaps forget their situation for a short time, it is a wonderful thing.
February 15th 2010
Emily Knox | Posted in Emergencies | View Comments
Tags: emily knox, ERU, Haiti, logistics, mass sanitation
Monday Feb 8th:
There was a lot of activity at the warehouse today. We loaded trucks for Haiti as per the latest requisition from the field. Shelter is a priority so we sent thousands of family tents and tarpaulins. The ten 40 ft containers that will have left by lunchtime tomorrow are carrying 150 tonnes of tents, tarpaulins and kitchen sets. Meanwhile another 150 tonnes is making its way from Rio Haina port to Haiti. Attached is a picture of the mega-forklift that moves containers at the port that Gareth was impressed with.
It’s only three days now until my replacement arrives with the second rotation team so I’m trying to get things ready for the handover. It’s weird to think that I will be leaving. It’s only been just over 3 weeks but it feels like a lifetime. I will miss being able to wear a t-shirt outside in the evening. I will also miss our journeys back from the warehouse, which are full of lively banter and music. Dominicans love music and the driver and volunteers usually start singing on the way home – bachata, meringue, even mambo… It’s a welcome relief from the stresses of the day!
15th Feb:
Well, it is my last day tomorrow… David and I return to the UK. Maria my replacement has arrived and I am in the process of handing over the gauntlet to her. Looking forward to the 24 hour sleep that I have booked myself in for on my first day back!
Gareth has been called to Haiti so he took the 9 hour bus trip yesterday to Port-Au-Prince. The teams over there are reaching 2,500 families a day (working on 5 persons per family) with essential items such as tarpaulins, kitchen sets and mosquito nets. For me, it’s hard being based over the border as you don’t get to see first-hand people making use of the items being sent. However, I am glad to have been part of it.
Heard it’s been snowing back home, which is going to be a bit of a shock to the system after a month of Dominican heat!
So, thanks for reading and hasta luego…
Cross posted from the British Red Cross international diary
February 12th 2010
Sarah Oughton | Posted in Emergencies | View Comments
Tags: emergency response, emergency response unit, ERU, Haiti, Haiti earthquake, haiti earthquake appeal, latrines, poverty, sanitation, shelter, toilets, water and sanitation
Alastair Burnett, our recovery manger, just sent this candid account of what he’s been seeing in Haiti:
So it is 0530 and I am in my tent in the Red Cross base camp close to the airport in Port au Prince. I wouldn’t ideally be up at this time, but the noises of the aircraft taking off, the noises from others within the tent and the heat means that once you are awake at this time, there is no going back to sleep.
I arrived here from Santo Domingo in the Dominican Republic. Flying over Port-au-Prince was fascinating. In must have been a very striking looking city even before the earthquake, with hills to the back and the sea to the front, but flying in what strikes you is the clearly massive destruction many parts of this city has experienced. This was further compounded over the course of my first day as I visited camp after camp of internally displaced people (IDP). Discussing with colleagues, and many of us have seen a lot of areas of destruction whether that be in Africa, Asia or Europe, we all agreed that none of us have seen anything like this. The only way to really describe it is to think back to old black and white footage of cities like Berlin and Dresden at the end of the Second World War. This city looks as though it has had a war fought through it.
The Red Cross has a camp, in the grounds of what was destined to be the Hilton Hotel, close to the airport. The shell of the Hilton building is now our offices. Don’t get me wrong, there is no breakfast in bed here – it is a concrete shell with no windows or proper floors, functioning sanitation, water or power. However, people have done a great job getting this area operational and it is now home to over 250 Red Cross staff from across the world, ranging from doctors and nurses to logisticians and water engineers. There are two canteens, toilet and shower blocks and wireless internet access. Scores of tents are neatly arranged around the concrete structure. It is far from 5 star but it provides safe and secure location for people to work from, which of course is so important in these situations. The camp empties out during the day but begins to fill up again from 1800 as it begins to get dark and the curfew that we apply to staff comes into force.
I spent yesterday with one of the sanitation engineers the British Red Cross has provided to the relief operation. He was carrying out a survey of some of the camps in which people have gathered, there are about 800 of them now ranging in size from a few hundred people to tens of thousands. The situation in these camps is terrible. People lack adequate materials for shelter and for some people their shelter consists of little more than a bed sheet strung over a piece of string. Some of the lucky few have received some tarpaulin, which provides greater protection from the sun and the rain, as well as a better degree of privacy, and an even smaller minority a tent, although these are relatively few and far between, for a range of reasons.
The work of the Red Cross is largely evident in the water it is providing to these camps, a huge amount has clearly been done in this area. We are currently trucking in large amounts of water on a daily basis and, through the emergency water facilities we have brought into the country, providing about a million litres of water a day to these camps. We have also provided some basic household items for people (cooking sets, soap etc) as well as some sanitation facilities.
The sanitation situation is very poor. In many places people simply have no where to go to the toilet. Some camps have a small hole in the ground that needs to be shared by hundreds of people. Other camps, some in the grounds of schools or colleges, may have one toilet but these rapidly become blocked and unusable. Piles of rubbish can be seen around these camps, as well as growing amounts of standing water.
The rainy season will start in a couple of months, and we have to see how we can do more to address some of these immediate issues. I came here with shelter in mind as a priority. In fact I was wrong, it is the sanitation needs that are the greatest, although everything here at the moment is urgent.
Without improved sanitation there is a high risk of the outbreak of disease in the densely packed camps people are living in. Cholera in particular could spread very quickly. One camp I went to today had eight toilets for 2,000 people. But of course for many people those facilities are inaccessible as they are located on just one side of the camp. There are many issues to consider in regard to location of toilets – not just health and hygiene, but also protection for women and children if such facilities are not easily available. People have a good understanding of basic hygiene issues – you can see that around you when you walk around – but lack the hardware to be able to put that into practice, and again, you can see that when you walk around. So – toilets, and lots more of them, as soon as possible.
Waste management also needs to be addressed – piles of waste attract rats. Rats spread disease. We have to look at how peoples waste can be better managed and work with the communities to help them on that. Again, many people understand that and have asked us for the tools to enable them to improve their current squalid living environments.
Vector control is also an issue – ensuring there are no pools of standing water is pretty much the number one thing in this to stop mosquitoes breeding. In a country where malaria and dengue fever is endemic we have to work with the communities to minimise the risk of major outbreaks.
Shelter here will be a nightmare. People are displaced in a number of different ways. I went to one location where many houses are still standing but there are just thousands of people camped in the road outside their homes as they do not want to return inside. Others are camped by the ruins of their homes in small groups. Others, gathering in their hundreds, in the grounds of churches or schools. The big camps, containing up to 10,000 people are located in former parks or other public spaces. Some people who fled the city in search of work are now returning and new camps of people are springing up all the time. People’s shelters are very basic and back to back – there is no security, there is no privacy and there is no dignity for the occupants. The risk of fire is huge and the space so cramped it is hard to think of ways to improve the conditions. For people who have endured years of political and social unrest, as well as in many cases chronic poverty I personally feel they deserve better. Despite the challenges this country has faced, and its poor image to the outside world, many of these people still maintain a level of pride in themselves that they should not be allowed to lose. It may be one of the most important things to help them through the years to come, and rebuilding their lives will take years.
Well, it is getting light and I have things to do. I will write more when I get a chance later.
February 9th 2010
Sarah Oughton | Posted in Emergencies | View Comments
Tags: emergency response, emergency response unit, ERU, Haiti, Haiti earthquake, haiti earthquake appeal, logistics, red cross, resilience, sanitation
Paul Jenkins is one of hundreds of Red Cross workers currently in Haiti. As part of a field assessment and co-ordination team (FACT) he is helping co-ordinate the complex and demanding emergency response operation. Here are his initial reflections after arriving in Port-au-Prince:
I’m staying at the ‘Haiti Hilton’. It must be the first Hilton where the best room in the house is a Red Cross tent shared with five other delegates. This is Red Cross Base Camp, the site from which the enormous International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement response to the devastating Haiti earthquake is managed.
The camp is growing all the time as more delegates and equipment arrive to support this amazing response. I understand that there were plans to build a Hilton Hotel here some years ago, but due to the insecurity in the country the site was abandoned. All that is left is the shell of a building and several acres of very dusty land.
This was our good fortune. The building has become the office for the International Federation’s Field Assessment and Co-ordination Team (FACT) that is responsible for coordinating this complex and demanding operation. No doors and no windows, but an unbelievable amount of commitment and determination. What might have been luxury apartments are now the offices of the relief, water and sanitation, health, shelter, telecommunications and support services teams. It’s hot and dusty, but I can only reflect on how much easier it is here, than for the many thousands of people all around us whose lives were turned upside down on 12 January.
Surrounding the building are the many tents of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Emergency Response Units. These are the teams that go out each day to the many hundreds of camps in the city, where the people who fled their devastated homes have established make-shift shelters. Our own British Red Cross sanitation team is doing a fantastic job in trying to provide sanitation to some of these people and reduce the risk of a disease outbreak in the overcrowded conditions. The challenges for them are enormous, as there is very little space in the displaced camps to construct latrines for the population. They are really having to be creative to find ways of supporting people in these challenging circumstances. It’s incredible that these Emergency Response Unit teams can provide support so effectively, to so many people, from the grounds of an abandoned hotel. From these hot and cluttered tents, the Red Cross and Red Crescent is providing more than 1 million litres of water a day to people affected by the earthquake.
Helping to keep the Red Cross base camp going is one of the many things I’ve been doing since I arrived here ten days ago. As more delegates arrive to support the response, the big challenge is to accommodate and feed everyone and ensure that they are safe, secure and healthy. We need to maintain the incredible energy of the people here. Everyone here works at least a fifteen hour day. It takes its toll and there are a lot of very tired looking people around. But there is an amazing spirit in the place. We all know it is tough, but it’s an enormous privilege to have the chance to be part of this operation. There is a huge amount of collective experience here. There are delegates from dozens of national societies that bring with them their experience of many disaster operations. But they all say that this is different and the challenges here are like nothing that humanitarian organisations have faced before.
I would have loved to have seen this country in happier times. What always strikes me is these terrible situations, is the resilience of the people. I can’t help wondering what it must have been like for them when the earthquake struck. Despite all they have lost, driving though Port-au-Prince today I saw people just trying to do the things they have always done. It’s Sunday and I watched a family dressed in their Sunday best walking past the ruined buildings on their way to church.
Building something better from the ruins of this place will not be easy. It will take a lot of support for many years to come from the Red Cross and many other agencies. It will be the resilience of these people that provides the cornerstone on which all our plans will be built and will depend.
I’ve been a humanitarian aid worker for thirty years, but this operation is definitely something special. And I’m certain that the Hilton Hotel will never seem quite the same again.
Images © Paul Jenkis/BRC
February 8th 2010
Emily Knox | Posted in Emergencies | View Comments
Tags: emergency response, emergency response unit, ERU, Haiti, Haiti earthquake, haiti earthquake appeal, logistics
Spent most of today training new assistant Leslie on the LOGIC software that we use to track goods. I’m happy that she has already worked for a shipping company so she is familiar with logistics. We speak an interesting mix of Spanglish but her English far outweighs my Spanish.. I apparently have a pronunciation problem with the word for age, which I pronounce as bottom. Very unfortunate.
Meanwhile, thousands of American Red Cross blankets and Kuwaiti Red Crescent tents have been arriving at the warehouse and the team in Haiti have asked us to send 10,000 mosquito nets…
Gareth has been keeping an eye on the port now that shipping is coming in, Carl our new Air Ops (Antonio finished his mission yesterday) found the Danish plane we’d been looking for and David has been adeptly dealing with the usual trials and tribulations of team leader diplomacy.
Image © Emily Knox/BRC
February 7th 2010
Katrina Crew | Posted in Emergencies | View Comments
Tags: emergency response, emergency response unit, ERU, Haiti, Haiti earthquake, haiti earthquake appeal, latrines, sanitation, toilets, water and sanitation
On Friday, my colleague Sarah wrote about the importance of toilets after a disaster like the Haiti earthquake. David Peppiatt, our international director, is in Haiti now and has sent back a vivid description of why they’re so needed.
Some early reflections at the end of my first day, which was spent mostly at base camp meeting with Red Cross and Red Crescent delegates and then a visit to La Piste camp, where our mass sanitation emergency response unit is working.
I cannot emphasise enough the enormous scale of this operation. There are 500 Red Cross delegates on the ground with more on their way. There’s a constant flow of people through base camp coming from Red Cross and Red Crescent National Societies around the world.. Base camp infrastructure and coordination are huge tasks alone – can you imagine having to provide tents, food, water and toilets for a few hundred aid workers on the edge of a city of rubble?
Conditions in the camps earthquake survivors are living in are shocking. Overcrowded. Filthy. People sleeping under scraps of plastic, old sheets draped over some precarious frame of wood, pieces of timber or whatever they have recovered from the rubble. What struck me most was the human waste scattered throughout the camp. The stench in places was repulsive.
Our mass sanitation team is working around the clock to dig latrines in the camp. It’s encouraging to see some already up and in use. They’re working to get 100 up by the end of next week. The public health team went in today to deliver hygiene promotion messages – translated into Creole and posters put up on toilets about washing hands. They’ve sent out thousands of SMS messages with public health advice and also launched a public health campaign on the radio.
Shelter is proving very problematic. People are extremely vulnerable in these makeshift shelters for long – little protection, unsafe and no dignity. The looming rainy season followed by hurricanes make this a matter of urgency and huge responsibility for the Red Cross as we lead the shelter response in Haiti.
As for the earthquake damage and destruction, words fail to describe what you see. It is like those desperate images of a bombed city where huge swathes have been decimated, destroyed and turned into mountains of rubble and debris. It will surely take many months, if not years in some places, to clear the damage and debris before the rebuilding can begin.
Follow updates from the mass sanitation team on the British Red Cross international blog.
February 5th 2010
Sarah Oughton | Posted in Emergencies, Podcasts | View Comments
Tags: emergency response, emergency response unit, ERU, Haiti, Haiti earthquake, haiti earthquake appeal, latrines, sanitation, toilets, video, water and sanitation
Okay so toilets may not be the first thing you think of when it comes to life-saving equipment, but think again. Without decent sanitation facilities, diseases like cholera can spread like wild fire and as was seen in the Zimbabwe crisis last year – thousands of people can die as a result.
In an article on Reuters AlertNet, the UN reports that 7,000 latrines are urgently needed in Haiti to help prevent the spread of disease.
My colleague, Sharon Reader, is currently in Port-au-Prince with our sanitation emergency response unit. Listen in as I speak to her and find out how it’s all going.
Image © Joe Lowry/IFRC
January 29th 2010
Emily Knox | Posted in Emergencies | View Comments
Tags: aid, emergency response, emergency response unit, ERU, Haiti, Haiti earthquake, haiti earthquake appeal, logistics, sanitation, water and sanitation
Moved office to the warehouse, which is great for me as I don’t get disturbed by the hustle and bustle of the operations centre. However, I am getting to know the Dominican Republic mosquitos well.. Those of you who know me won’t be surprised to hear that I have various welt-like bites even on my face! Don’t worry I am taking my malaria tablets…
So, our team has added a few more countries to it. Kenny from Scotland who is managing one of our warehouses and Gareth from Wales who is doing a recce of one of the seaports. We’ve also had the Logs Coordinator over from Haiti for the last few days. He said that the other emergency response units (ERU) such as the hospital ERUs and water ERUs are reaching thousands with medical care and the production of millions of litres of clean water a day. It feels good to hear that the things we move are helping people.
Image © BRC
Donate now to the British Red Cross Haiti Earthquake Appeal.