Sunday, November 1, 2009

Thank you

Sorry if it took me this long to acknowledge you.we lost the computer and all our things in the flood. It took us a month to clear all the mud in the house and it was sooo tiring,and depressing.

Thank you ann sooo much for the money and to Project Noah's Ark.It's a big help especially for the kids because they lost all their school books and uniforms.they've been going to school without books for now.

we have a video of the flood created by my friend.

"sent you a video.and thanks...thanks...thanks so much ann and to Noah;s Ark.it's a big big help. here's my email- aileen1000000@yahoo.com"

Monday, October 26, 2009

Reposting - Hunger Strikes

UN food agency says 200 million more people hungry
By ROD McGUIRK (AP) 7 hours ago
CANBERRA, Australia Most of the developing world is paying more for food despite drops in commodity market prices during the global economic slowdown, with 200 million people joining the ranks of the hungry in the past two years, the U.N. World Food Program said Monday.

The agency's executive director Josette Sheeran blamed climate change, escalating fuel costs and falling incomes. She said the number of "urgently hungry" had now reached its highest ever 1.02 billion.

"One out of six people in humanity will wake up not sure that they can even fill a cup of food," Sheeran told reporters. "We have to make no mistake that hunger is on the march."

She said while prices had tumbled on global commodities markets due to the financial crisis, the prices of most food staples in the developing world have soared.

"The food crisis is not over. We have an anomaly happening where on global, big markets, the prices are down, but for 80 percent of commodities in the developing world, prices are higher today than they were a year ago, and the prices a year ago were double what they were the year before that," she said.

"What it means is for about 80 percent of the developing world, people can afford one third as much food today as they could two or three years ago," she said.

Sheeran signed Monday a 140 million Australian dollar ($130 million) four-year aid agreement with the Australian government. The agreement includes AU$40 million to provide school meals in Southeast Asia, Africa and possibly South America and will add to the WFP's overall budget for global food aid.

Sheeran, who flew to Canberra from Manila on Sunday, said the Philippines could lose up to 1.1 million tons (one million metric tons) of rice because of the recent typhoons.

Africa and India were also losing crops due to drought and floods.
She said the two back-to-back typhoons in late September and early October that killed nearly 1,000 people in the Philippines, coupled with the Indonesia earthquake that killed more than 1,000 on western Sumatra and the recent tsunami that killed 183, mostly in Samoa, were examples of natural disasters becoming more frequent and ferocious in recent decades.

She said there had been a fourfold increase in the number of natural disasters in the past 20 years.
"All we know is that the world is facing increasingly frequent and ferocious natural disasters and the most vulnerable people and nations are getting hit hard and we better prepare now," she said.

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Google Alert - philippines typhoon news

Pacific Ocean Storm Strengthens East of Philippines
Bloomberg
... Ocean and is forecast to become a typhoon as it heads toward the Philippines, where more than 700 people died in cyclones over the past three weeks. ...
See all stories on this topic
Tonight: Former Guam Governor's Birthday Bash To Raise Funds For Typhoon ...
Guam News Factor
Gutierrez, who is a declared contender for the 2010 Governor's race, is still raising funds for the Philippines' typhoon relief efforts, along with his ...
See all stories on this topic
The Associated Press
Black Eyed Peas singer brings aid to Philippines
The Associated Press
The worst flooding in 40 years struck the rice-growing northern Philippines and the capital Manila late last month when a typhoon after a storm dumped heavy ...
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Canadian special immigration measures for Philippines typhoon victims
Workpermit.com
There will also be priority processing of temporary residence applications of those adversely affected by the Typhoon. This is on top of the $5 million for ...
See all stories on this topic

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Calling All Angels - Donates to our Quest



The King's has decided to support our quest. With their generosity, every single purchase of an angel, a dollar or a euro will be donated to Project: Noah's Ark.

We hope to generate funding through this generosity. Please help us advertise it.

The season of giving is soon to come. Their items would be a very nice christmas gift.

Check out their blogsite:

Mention: Project: Noah's Ark for every purchase.



Thank you,

Michaela De Angeli

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

A word from a volunteer - GVN site



Here's an article I found on the web via GVN press. It's a first hand information that I would like to share with all of you. Hearing it form the news seem profound but hearing from it those who specifically went there to help is beyond expression.


Loss in the Philippines
By Shafaq Varghese October 2009

A volunteer's reflection in the wake of typhoon Ketsana


Visiting the areas affected by the flooding was a heart-wrenching experience. The devastation was limitless. In one of the hardest hit areas, numerous houses, which had originally been built alongside a major river, had been flattened and the homeless victims were scattered on the streets living in temporary spaces made up of plastic sheets tied together with thread. Garbage, which was basically household items destroyed by the flooding, was piled up on every street corner and outside every house. It was obvious that anything these residents owned, in an already poverty-stricken area, had been washed away or spoiled by the flood.

In one street corner hundreds of people were standing in the sweltering heat, in lines that stretched around several blocks, to receive aid from their local community leadership. I was sceptical on whether enough aid would be available for the hordes of people waiting.

The family we visited to provide aid to had lost everything they owned in the flood. Their house had been submerged in water and they had survived by taking shelter in their neighbour's two-story house. Every single piece of clothing and furniture this family owned was covered with thick mud. They had no food, no drinking water or clean clothes. And even though they had started the cleaning process, it was obvious that in the absence of proper nourishment and basic amenities, it would be weeks or even months before they would be able to have a normal life again.

The same story was repeated in the hundreds of other houses that we passed by. From the families scavenging through their destroyed goods for items they could still make use of, to the one living inside a truck because they had lost everything, to the group of people holding a vigil on a bridge for a drowned child, everywhere I looked, the only thing visible was utter destruction and suffering.

In the three and a half hours that we surveyed the area, we saw just two aid operations in progress, one through a UN agency and the other through Red Cross. From the size of the trucks and the number of victims standing in line to receive aid, it was clear that the rations provided by these aid operations would be inadequate. Worst still, there wasn’t a single medical program in progress to provide temporary medical care or check-ups to the victims. With millions of dollars worth of aid coming into the Philippines just for the sole purpose of providing food, water, shelter and medical care to the victims of the flooding, I wondered where the money was being spent if not in the area with the highest number of casualties.

Clearly, the government and other aid agencies need to take additional steps to reduce the suffering of the people affected by the flooding, most of whom are now living on the streets and are highly susceptible to diseases, mal-nutrition and probable death. This includes, first and foremost, providing additional food, clean water and medical help, in order to prevent further fatalities and the spread of diseases. Rebuilding the houses and cleaning the streets of the loads of garbage scattered everywhere would be the next significant step. These must then be followed by providing safer and more stable housing in the areas more prone to rain and flood damage, in order to prevent such widespread disaster and loss of life in the future.

Shafaq Varghese, Philippines volunteer
PHILIPPINES DISASTER RELIEF FUND: Please consider a donation today
http://www.volunteer.org.nz/media/articles/ketsana.php

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Gawad Kalinga Philippines

I would like to share with you the efforts of my fellow batchmates who are in the Philippines. Their group is called CSA GK. CSA for Colegio San Agustin and GK stands for Gawad Kalinga.

Here is their latest post:

Folks, I sat down with the folks working on our CSA GK GK Village today. Quick update: our site is above water, but surrounded by flooded areas. It is now a relief center. Taguig is half-submerged. GK Taguig is helping about 5,000 families-that 's 25,000 people (5 per family) who have had no water, light, food, dry clothing, and a dry home to live in the past week. Many are getting desperate as they are day laborers who can not work (can not travel, no money, guarding home, etc.). Visiting LGU officials have been stoned. GK delivered relief goods on 6 x 6 trucks and military escorts.CSA has been donating (3x last week) and helping out. Last Tuesday, some of us arranged the delivery, On behalf of Enderun College, a truck full of goods. Today, we collected 4 mini-trucks full of dry goods, food, water, clothes, etc. as well as cooked 300 / packed meals again courtesy of Enderun College, and had it delivered to the command center in Bgy.Pinagsama GK Taguig, Taguig. From the Angel Brigade group working at The FORT, we got 22 boxes of medicines for the medical mission to be held at the CSA GK Village site tomorrow, Oct. .. 4, noon Sunday 8 a.m.-12. What we can do, aside from the usual donation of relief goods, for GK Taguig / CSA GK Village: 1 Provide trucks or facilitate the delivery of goods to affected areas surrounding CSA GK Village; 2nd Those with military contacts, request Army trucks to deliver goods under armed escort as people are getting desperate and unruly, 3 Identify groups or areas with lots of relief goods collected, but can not deliver them to the targeted areas. For example, many groups committed to pick up the food / goods from Enderun, but never showed up today. That's why we were able to get most of those goods, and, 4 share relevant information on transportation, sources of goods, contact persons, etc. As someone wrote, this will be a marathon, not a sprint relief, Aswat effort levels are receding slowly. The rains from Typhoon PARMA today want to complicate matters. CSA GK Village will be needing our assistance, being the focal point of relief efforts in that area. Contact me at 0917.904.8207 if you are interested in helping the CSA GK Village. Our contact person is Taguig GK Raul Ramiterre (0919-229-1416) salamat at mabuhay! Hecky

Thank you,

Anna Gatchalian

Saturday, October 10, 2009

A message from a friend

As happy as I am to see some of my beloved ones online in Facebook. In which I had hoped they are doing fine. However, when I asked about the current situation this is the reply I got:

It is bad. some places here in metro manila like pasig and marikina which was badly hit by Ondoy typhoon is still flooded. Not as high but there is still water. Typhoon pepeng, on the other hand, hit the north badly. Pangasinan, Cagayan, Baguio, Benguet to name a few. And yes, Philippines do need help. A lot of families lost their houses and stuff and businesses, not to mention, lost some lives. People do need clothings, food, meds, money to start anew. It is an awakening. Thank you for the concern. Hopefully there are millions like you out there.Be safe.

From the staff.
Michaela de Angeli