Tuesday, September 29, 2009

507-Carat Rough Diamond Found

507-Carat Rough Diamond Found
by Deidre Woollard (RSS feed) Sep 29th 2009 at 10:02PM

It looks like a chunk of clouded ice but the stone shown at right is a 507-carat rough diamond found at the Petra Diamonds Cullinan Mine in South Africa. The 507.55 carat stone is believed to be of exceptional color and clarity, and is most likely a Type II diamond. The rough was found as part of a run that also included a 168-carat piece of rough and two other stones of 58.5 and 53.3 carats. A lucky day indeed, the stone is one of the top 20 largest high-quality rough diamonds ever found making it incredibly rare.



The Cullinan Mine has yielded some of the world's great diamonds including the largest "gem-quality" stone ever recovered, the "Cullinan," 3,106 carats rough, and was the source for the Golden Jubilee, at 755 carats rough, and the Centenary, at 599 carats rough. Cullinan also produced the piece of rough that became the Taylor-Burton diamond, a stone that is 69 carats polished. The diamonds will be analyzed by a team of experts and then the long process of determining how to best cut them can begin.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Mary Queen Of Scots' Last Letter.

When I was in Edinburgh, Scotland, I visited the Edinburgh Castle and saw Mary Queen Of Scots' bed. Several years later, I read "Mary Queen Of Scots" (1969) by Lady Antonia Fraser and it took me back to the Edinburgh's trip and feeling of absolute awe, of wonder, of humility.



FILE - In this June 2006 file photo, visitors, some with audio guide headsets, learn all about Edinburgh Castle in Scotland.
(AP Photo/Jeannette Goldstein, file)

Here is another story reminding me of the cold summer days in Edinburgh in 1965.

Last letter of Mary Queen of Scots appears briefly
Wed Sep 16, 2009 7:17am ED

By Ian MacKenzie

EDINBURGH (Reuters Life!) - At 2 a.m. on a frigid February morning in 1587, Mary Queen of Scots sat at her table and penned a last letter before her execution in the great hall of Fotheringhay Castle in the English midlands.

"Tonight, after dinner, I have been advised of my sentence: I am to be executed like a criminal at eight in the morning," she wrote to her brother-in-law, the king of France.

Fragile with age but in remarkably good condition, the letter by one of the great tragic figures of Scottish history is making a rare appearance until Sept 21 at the National Library of Scotland.

Library spokesman Bruce Blacklaw said the library wanted to promote a new visitors' center and bring to public view treasures tucked away in the library's vaults.

"What we wanted to do is bring people in...There's no better way than to get one of the real iconic treasures from Scottish history out to be seen," he said.

He added Mary's last letter was unlikely to emerge again from its dark air-conditioned safe for "a long time."
...................

In 1603, Mary's son James VI of Scotland acceded to the English throne as James I on the death of Elizabeth I, thus uniting England and Scotland under one monarch.

Mary's remains lie in London's Westminster Abbey, conveyed there by her son. Continued...


http://www.reuters.com/article/lifestyleMolt/idUSTRE58F25620090916?feedType=RSS&feedName=lifestyleMolt

Wednesday, August 05, 2009

Move Over Myspace.


Brothers Reunited After 70 Years
AOL News
posted: 6 HOURS 52 MINUTES AGO
comments: 36
filed under: National News


(Aug. 4) - Two brothers separated as infants have been reunited after 70 years -– thanks to Facebook.

John Mellinger, of Spokane, Wash., had known since boyhood that he was adopted. When he was in his 40s, he tried to trace his birth parents. He was able to track down an aunt -- who told him that he had a brother. But then his search stalled.

Remarkable Reunions
Dan Pelle, The Spokesman Review / AP


Seven decades after they were separated, brothers John Mellinger, left, and Dan Newburn met again July 22. Newburn, 71, of Las Vegas, contacted Mellinger, 70, of Spokane, Wash., via Facebook. Their teenage mom gave the brothers up in 1939 in Boise, Idaho. They were adopted by different families.

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Global Protest.

Protesters Demand Iran End Clampdown
By JILL LAWLESS,AP

LONDON -Protesters around the world called on Iran Saturday to end its clampdown on opposition activists, demanding the release of hundreds rounded up during demonstrations against the country's disputed election.
Groups including Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International backed a global day of action, with protests planned in more than 80 cities, including several in the United States.
The protesters want Iranian authorities to release what they say are hundreds, or even thousands, of people detained during protests that followed the presidential election last month that returned Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to power.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Global Citizens.: Enlightened Next Magazine.

Global Citizens.: Enlightened Next Magazine.

Enlightened Next Magazine.


Extreme sport spiritual experience.
The closest that I came to experience spiritual and uplifting feeling was a few times when I was at the top of Heavenly Valley and Sqauw Valley ski trails. Fresh clean air, snow all around with only a narrow trails to ski on, blight blue skies, white clouds, green forest and gorgeous Lake Tahoe down below. That was quite an experience!

Tuesday, July 7, 2009 at 1:13pm
Big Wave Surfing (Think About This #64)
by Megan Cater • 25 Comments

The following excerpt from the movie Riding Giants features Laird Hamilton, considered by many to be the greatest big wave surfer ever, pulling off a move that stunned the professional surfing world.

http://blog.enlightennext.org/?p=1893#more-1893

Monday, June 08, 2009

Myanmar: Collapse of an Ancient Pagoda

Myanmar: Collapse of an Ancient Pagoda
By Global Voices Online • on June 4, 2009

An ancient pagoda (2300 years old) collapsed while it was going under renovation, killing at least 5 people, injuring many workers and pilgrims.


Collapsed Danoke Pagoda (from New Era Journal)

The 180-foot Danoke Pagoda is situated in Dala Township, which is across the Yangon
River, in Yangon Division. The pagoda was originally damaged during Cyclone Nargis, so it had been going under renovation.

Just on May 7th, 2009, there had been an umbrella-hoisting ceremony at Danoke Pagoda, which was attended by military leader Senior General Than Shwe’s wife.

Friday, April 17, 2009

A Room With a Zoo

On Travel Section - MSN:

A Room With a Zoo

Check out these lodgings where you can get up close and personal with creatures of every stripe.
1 of 15 images
Fishbowl in a Kimpton's Hotel Monaco guestroom (© John Dziekan/Courtesy of Kimpton Hotels & Restaurants)
A Room With a Zoo

These hotels aren't just pet-friendly properties: They're wild about animals, from dogs you can borrow while you're in town to live-in seals and resident giraffes.

All Kimpton hotels nationwide (http://www.kimptonhotels.com) welcome pets and present them with toys as well as in-room bowls and beds. Guests staying at Kimpton's Monaco Hotels get an extra treat: They can borrow a complimentary goldfish for the duration of their stay. Even better, there's no need to clean the bowl or feed the frisky, finned friends: With the "Guppy Love" program, the hotel staff does it all. Even, we suppose, flushing away any fish that have permanently checked out.

Slide show text by Harriet Baskas; photo editing by Connie Ricca.

Harriet Baskas writes regularly about airports, air travel and other adventures for MSNBC.com and USATODAY.com and on her "Stuck at the Airport" blog, http://www.stuckattheairport.com.


A Room With a Zoo

Check out these lodgings where you can get up close and personal with creatures of every stripe.
2 of 15 images
Koko the parrot at the Southern Palms Beach Club, Barbados (© Southern Palms Beach Club)

A Room With a Zoo

A parrot named Koko has been living at the Southern Palms Beach Club in Barbados (http://www.southernpalms.net) for at least 45 years. She has a limited vocabulary, but is reportedly a good listener. "Especially," says managing director Britta Pollard, "if you sing to her." Pollard says that many years ago, Koko was sent to a zoo aviary to be near other birds, but she got sick there and recovered only when she returned to the hotel environment.


A Room With a Zoo

Check out these lodgings where you can get up close and personal with creatures of every stripe.
3 of 15 images
Turtle on beach outfitted with tracking device for the Turtle Rehabilitation Unit, Madinat Jumeirah–Mina A'Salam Resort, Dubai, United Arab Emirates (© Jumeirah LLC 2009)

In Dubai, a turtle rehabilitation unit based at the Madinat Jumeirah-Mina A'Salam Resort (http://www.jumeirah.com/
en/hotels-and-resorts/Destinations/Dubai/Madinat-Jumeirah/
The-Resort
) helps save dozens of sick turtles each year. Scientists or local residents who find the animals in the water or on the shoreline have brought many large green turtles and smaller hawksbill turtles to the center. Guests are welcome to visit while the animals recover in a special swimming pen at the hotel. Once rehabilitated, the turtles are returned to their natural habitat.
MORE ON THE MSN SITE:

http://travel.msn.com//Guides/MSNTravelSlideShow.aspx?cp-documentid=994127

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Earth Hour 2009,


Earth Hour 2009, Saturday March 28, 8:30pm


THIS SATURDAY 28 MARCH AT 8.30PM YOU CAN VOTE EARTH BY SWITCHING OFF YOUR LIGHTS FOR ONE HOUR - EARTH HOUR.

MAKE YOUR VOTE COUNT

Turn off your lights for Earth Hour, record your vote and share it with the world! Here's how:

http://www.earthhour.org/home/

http://www.thegreenpasture.org/

http://eco-pilgrim.blogspot.com/

Monday, February 23, 2009

Wall Street slides to 12-year low

Wall Street slides to 12-year low
Mon Feb 23, 2009 9:03pm EST

By Chuck Mikolajczak

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Wall Street slumped to a 12-year low on Monday as investors lost faith that the U.S. government will be able to stabilize the financial system.

The S&P 500 and the Dow both posted their lowest closes since the spring of 1997 as reports the government may convert its stake in Citigroup into a big common stock holding fell short of what many see as necessary to fix big banks.

"It is generally a market 'no' vote to what we're getting from Washington," said Hank Smith, chief investment officer at Haverford Trust Co in Philadelphia, of the reaction to the Citigroup news.
"It certainly doesn't inspire confidence when you do break multi-year lows, so it's just feeding into a real negative cycle that we're in right now," he said.

Adding to the bleak picture, CNBC reported that insurer American International Group could be forced into bankruptcy if new rescue talks with the government fail to secure it more funding.
The Dow Jones industrial average tumbled 250.73 points, or 3.40 percent, to 7,114.94. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index dropped 26.71 points, or 3.47 percent, to 743.34. The Nasdaq Composite Index skidded 53.51 points, or 3.71 percent, to 1,387.72.

In addition, worries about a decline in business and consumer spending on technology hurt the biggest names in the tech sector. IBM and Hewlett-Packard were the two of the biggest drags on the Dow industrials, with IBM shedding 5.0 percent to $84.37 and Hewlett-Packard sliding 6.3 percent to $29.28 a share.

The market capitalization of the Dow fell $77.1 billion on Monday. The index is down nearly 50 percent from its record high close in October 2007, with about $10 trillion of value in wiped out since then.

So far this year, the Dow has fallen 18.9 percent while the S&P 500 has shed 17.7 percent and the Nasdaq has dropped 12 percent.

The blue-chip index is down nearly 50 percent from its record close in October 2007.

Fears that some major U.S. banks could be nationalized continued to drag on sentiment on Monday, as stocks briefly came off lows after the White House reiterated that a privately held banking system regulated by the government was still the best way to operate.

As the only boosts to the Dow, Citigroup and Bank of America were up 9.7 percent and 3.2 percent, respectively, after having fallen more than 35 percent each on Friday.

Helping to fuel the tech slide was a Morgan Stanley downgrade of its PC sales forecasts for 2009 and 2010, citing lower prices and weaker-than-expected demand for PCs given the rising sales of netbooks, which are cheaper, no-frills notebook computers.

Apple Inc, down nearly 5 percent to $86.95, was the primary drag on Nasdaq.

After the closing bell, JP Morgan announced it will slash its quarterly dividend to 5 cents a share from 38 cents, saying that will enable it to retain an additional $5 billion in common equity per year. Shares rose 1 percent to $19.70 in extended trade. Continued...

Saturday, February 07, 2009

Old Manuscript.

An undated handout photo released to Reuters February 6, 2009 ...
Reuters
Fri Feb 6, 7:58 AM ET

An undated handout photo released to Reuters February 6, 2009 shows an ancient manuscript which authorities in northern Cyprus believe is an ancient version of the Bible written in Syriac, a dialect of the native language of Jesus. The manuscript was found in a police raid on suspected antiquity smugglers. Turkish Cypriot police testified in a court hearing they believe the manuscript could be about 2,000 years old. Experts were however divided over the provenance of the manuscript, and whether it was an original, which would render it priceless, or a fake.

To match Reuters Life! CYPRUS-BIBLE/ (Kibris/Handout/Reuters)

Tuesday, February 03, 2009

10 New Amphibian Species Discovered

10 New Amphibian Species Discovered

Reuters
posted: 9 HOURS 27 MINUTES AGO

WASHINGTON (Feb. 2) - Ten new species of amphibians -- including three kinds of poisonous frogs and three transparent-skinned glass frogs -- have been discovered in the mountains of Colombia, conservationists said Monday.

With amphibians under threat around the globe, the discovery was an encouraging sign and reason to protect the area where they were found, said Robin Moore, an amphibian expert at the environmental group Conservation International, which made the find.





Marco Rada, Conservation International Colombia

Conservationists discovered 10 new species of amphibians -- mostly frogs -- in a mountainous area of Colombia. This is a rain frog, one of two new kinds of rain frogs spotted on the expedition by the group Conservation International.

Saturday, December 06, 2008

What To Know Before Buying Waterfron Home.



























(Dana Point, photos by Jieranai Maier - 2005)


Good Articles to Read about Waterfront Home.


People love luxury waterfront homes, whelther it is a beachfront home, a lakefront home or a home on the canel.





































Waterfront Living
An Aquatic Destination
Looking for a home with a water view? Get the inside scoop on what life is like by the water.




















Boston is one of the Top Ten Best Waterfront living.


La Jolla, Calif. is another Top Ten Best Waterfront living.
Honolulu & San Francisco made the list also.



Sunday, November 02, 2008

Top Countries in Global Competitiveness

No. 1: U.S.
Market Size: 1Innovation: 1Education/Training: 5

The U.S. retains its position this year as the world's most competitive country. Many robust structural features, such as business systems, formidable universities, and top-ranked innovation make the American economy remarkably powerful and productive. They also help to soften economic shocks such as routine business downturns and, with luck, the current financial crisis. However, despite having the largest economy on the planet, fiscal deficits in recent years have weakened the country's global standing and increased public indebtedness. That could limit flexibility in fiscal policy in the future and leave the U.S. more vulnerable to outside influences.

No. 2: Switzerland
Market Size: 37Innovation: 3Education/Training: 7

No. 3: Denmark
Market Size: 46Innovation: 10Education/Training: 2

No. 4: Sweden
Market Size: 32Innovation: 5Education/Training: 3

No. 5: Singapore
Market Size: 53Innovation: 11Education/Training: 8

No. 6: Finland
Market Size: 50Innovation: 2Education/Training: 1

No. 7: Germany
Market Size: 5Innovation: 8Education/Training: 21

No. 8: Netherlands
Market Size: 20Innovation: 12Education/Training: 11

No. 9: Japan
Market Size: 3Innovation: 4Education/Training: 23

No. 10: Canada
Market Size: 13Innovation: 13Education/Training: 9

No. 11: Hong Kong
Market Size: 38Innovation: 24Education/Training: 28

No. 12: Britain
Market Size Rank: 6Innovation Rank: 17Education/Training Rank: 18

http://images.businessweek.com/ss/08/10/1022_competitive_countries/13.htm

Read the story;

Top Countries in Global Competitiveness
Despite this year's global market turmoil, many of the same countries, including the U.S., remain atop the World Economic Forum ranking
By Matt Mabe

http://www.businessweek.com/globalbiz/content/oct2008/gb20081022_377709.htm

Friday, June 20, 2008

Career Management

Career Management

by Toni Bowers, Head Blogs Editor
Employers who check out job candidates on MySpace could be legally liable

If a potential employer uses a social networking site to check out a job candidate and then rejects that person based on what they see, he or she could be charged with discrimination.

——————————————————————————————————————-

According to Workforce.com, a site that helps HR reps stay current with all matters HR, employers who use the data available on social networking sites like Facebook and MySpace to make hiring decisions could be subject to charges of employment discrimination and litigation.

Employers could be accused of using the data on such sites to cull minorities, homosexuals, and other applicants who are members of protected class. It is even illegal in some states to make a job decision based on applicants’ political activities, a factor that would be easy to find out on a social networking site.

From the site:

A survey of about 350 employers in October 2007 by New York-based Vault.com, a media company focused on careers, found that 44% of employers use social networking sites to examine the profiles of job candidates, and 39% have looked up the profile of a current employee.

Although “failure to hire” lawsuits are rarer than other kinds of employment litigation, their numbers are expected to increase due to the growing use of social networking sites. There’s always a time lapse between problems that arise because of technology and legal precedents that address them.

http://blogs.techrepublic.com.com/career/?p=338

Monday, June 09, 2008

First Lady Travels to Afghanistan

First Lady Travels to Afghanistan
By DEB RIECHMANN,AP
Posted: 2008-06-08 18:04:39
Filed Under: World News
BAMIYAN, Afghanistan (June 8) - First lady Laura Bush, on a mission to highlight signs of progress in war-weary Afghanistan, ventured outside the capital Sunday to an area that symbolizes both the destruction and attempt at rebirth.




Laura Bush Visits Afghanistan


Fresh attacks swept across the country and the BBC reported that one of its Afghan journalists was kidnapped and killed.

On her third visit to the country, the first lady flew into Kabul before boarding a helicopter for a 50-minute flight to Bamiyan province, the farthest she has traveled from Afghanistan's largest city.

The helicopter landed in a dusty field at a provincial reconstruction team compound operated by New Zealand. From there she could see the empty niches in a cliffside where two giant Buddha statues once stood.

They were carved into the sandstone cliffs more than 2,000 years ago. The Taliban, which considered the statues idolatrous and anti-Muslim, demolished the treasures in March 2001, causing an international outcry. The repressive Taliban ruled Afghanistan until the U.S. invaded after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

Bush's visit came ahead of a conference Thursday in Paris where the U.S. hopes other countries will pledge billions of dollars to help Afghanistan. She intends to address the conference.

"The people of Afghanistan don't want to go back and live like that," Bush told reporters during the nearly 14-hour flight to Kabul. "They know what it was like. The international community can't drop Afghanistan now, at this very crucial time."

President Bush, in an interview in Washington on Friday with RAI TV of Italy, said bluntly, "Afghanistan is broke."

Afghanistan is seeing a resurgence of violence, even as the U.S. and NATO have poured more thousands of new troops into the country, and a spiraling heroin trade. Last year, more than 8,000 people were killed in insurgency-related attacks — the most since the 2001 invasion — and violence has claimed more than 1,500 lives this year.

On Sunday, insurgents attacked a police convoy in central Afghanistan, killing 11 police and wounding one, an official said. Militants in the east attacked and killed four men including a local government official. The BBC said the body of one its Afghan journalists was found after he had gone missing in Helmand province.

During her daylong visit, the first lady met with President Hamid Karzai, saw a police academy where female recruits are trained and visited U.S. troops. The U.S. now has some 33,000 troops in Afghanistan, the most ever.

President Bush has defended Karzai against critics who say his government is weak and not doing enough to battle corruption and drug trafficking.

Karzai said at a news conference with the first lady on the grounds of the presidential palace that his government will go to the Paris conference with a "very realistic evaluation" of the past six years, including a look at problems such as corruption.

"We'll come back with some significant assistance from the international community to the Afghan people," Karzai said.

Laura Bush said the U.S. and other nations should not blame Karzai unless they are going to give him credit for all the progress being made.

"It's really not that fair," she told reporters before meeting the Afghan leader. "I think it's undermining, frankly, to blame him for a lot of the things that may or may not be his fault. He inherited — just by becoming president — a country that's been totally devastated. It is very, very difficult when you have al-Qaida and Taliban all over the borders and making incursions into Afghanistan, and it's intimidating for everyone."

At Bagram Air Field north of Kabul, she told about 600 U.S. soldiers gathering in a hangar of the "huge step forward to defend freedom from the forces of oppression." She thanked them for their service and acknowledged "your work isn't easy," noting multiple deployments and time away from families.

Her trip sought to focus on signs of progress. While standing beside Karzai, she said, "We've been discussing a lot of other issues that have to do both with our partnership between the United States government and Afghanistan, as far as education is concerned, and all the other great projects I visited today, a lot of agriculture, a lot of other things."

Earlier, she met with women training at the National Police Bamiyan Regional Training Center. She celebrated the construction of a paved road linking the Bamiyan airport with its bazaar and town center and toured a learning center under construction that will double as an orphanage.

Several dozen future students, all school-age children in traditional white scarfs, sang to her at the center, a project of the U.S.-Afghan Women's Council. The council was set up to help women gain the skills and education deprived them under the Taliban.

"Of course we want more girls in school and I think that's really key to the success of Afghanistan," Bush said.

For the Paris conference, France has set a goal of raising $12 billion to $15 billion for Afghan reconstruction projects through 2014. The United States is looking to contribute about one-quarter.

International donors have pledged about $32.7 billion in reconstruction money for Afghanistan since 2001, including $21 billion from the U.S.

"It's more important than ever for the international community to continue to support Afghanistan — certainly for the U.S. to continue to support Afghanistan — because we don't want it to be the way it was when the Buddhas were destroyed," she said.

From Afghanistan, she planned to fly to Slovenia, joining her husband on Monday for his final U.S.-European Union summit.

Associated Press writers Rahim Faiez and Amir Shah contributed to this report from Kabul.


Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2008-06-08 17:06:14

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Turmoil In Asia.
















Meanwhile Myanmar is still reeling and in need of HELPS!








UN chief condemns Burma response



United Nations secretary general Ban Ki-moon has criticised Burma's military junta for its "unacceptably slow response" to helping cyclone victims.



Nearly 32,000 people were killed by the cyclone on May 3 and almost 30,000 others are still missing, according to Burma state television.



"We believe that it's going to be very difficult to reach everybody and to tackle the crisis as we would like without some outside military and civilian assets," John Holmes, the UN's top humanitarian official, told reporters.



Almost all foreign relief workers have been barred entry into the isolated nation. The junta says it wants to hand out all donated supplies on its own.



"I want to register my deep concern - and immense frustration - at the unacceptably slow response to this grave humanitarian crisis," Ban said.



"Unless more aid gets into the country - very quickly - we face an outbreak of infectious diseases that could dwarf today's crisis. I therefore call, in the most strenuous terms, on the government of Burma to put its people's lives first. It must do all that it can to prevent this disaster from becoming even more serious."



Ban said Burma's leaders had not returned his repeated calls and letters to them, including a second letter sent on Monday, seeking greater co-operation with the UN and other international relief efforts.



Burma braced for more rain


Survivors of the Burma cyclone are bracing themselves for further torrential rain.



Storm warnings have been issued for the region despite large swathes of the country still lying submerged under putrid floodwater from the initial cyclone.



The Burma government has come under sustained international pressure as aid agencies warn the death toll following the cyclone could reach 1.5 million.



Further heavy deluges will hamper the progression of embryonic aid efforts which are only now starting to reach the more remote areas.



Oxfam said the stricken country faces a public health catastrophe unless clean water and sanitation are quickly provided.



Save the Children spokeswoman Kathryn Rawe said huge storms were expected to strike Burma.



http://news.uk.msn.com/article.aspx?cp-documentid=8281832

7.9 Earthquake In China




Nearly 19,000 Buried Alive in Town Near China Quake's Epicenter



May 13: Local residents work to clear away debris from a collapsed building in Mianzhu City, southwest China's Sichuan Province.


May 13: Local residents work to clear away debris from a collapsed building in Mianzhu City, southwest China's Sichuan Province.


Rescue workers sifted through tangled debris of toppled schools and homes Tuesday for nearly 19,000 victims buried or missing after China's worst earthquake in three decades, where the death toll soared to more than 12,000 people in the hardest-hit province alone, state media reported.



Hope that many survivors would be found was fleeting. Only 58 people were extricated from demolished buildings across the quake area so far, China Seismological Bureau spokesman Zhang Hongwei told the official Xinhua News Agency. In one county, 80 percent of the buildings had been destroyed.



Myanmar: Senior Red Cross Red Crescent aid worker returns from devastated delta

13 May 2008


The situation in Myanmar’s cyclone-devastated Irrawaddy delta is “overwhelming” according to Bridget Gardner, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies’ head of delegation who returned to Yangon today following a two day assessment visit. Ms Gardner was the first international aid official to visit the disaster zone with official permission.





Please donate to INTERNATIONAL RED CROSS and other organizations!!!

International Red Cross Red Crescent



http://www.ifrc.org/



Catholic Relief Services (CRS - USCC)


http://www.crs.org/


Catholic Relief Services was founded in 1943 by the Catholic Bishops of the United States to assist the poor and disadvantaged outside the country. Working through local offices and an extensive network of partners, CRS operates on 5 continents and in over 90 countries.



Doctors Without Borders


http://www.dwb.org/


Doctors Without Borders delivers medical help to populations endangered by war, civil strife, epidemics or natural disasters. Each year over 2,000 volunteer doctors representing 45 nationalities work worldwide in front-line hospitals, refugee camps, disaster sites, towns and villages providing primary health care, performing surgery, vaccinating children, operating emergency nutrition and sanitation programs and training local medical staff.






International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)

http://www.icrc.org/

The ICRC, independent of all governments and international organisations, endeavours to promote international humanitarian law and the fundamental human values underlying that law. The ICRC was founded by Geneva citizens in 1863 and has its headquarters in Geneva.



United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)

The UNHCR provides protection and assistance to the world's refugees. Today, the UNHCR is one of the world's principal humanitarian agencies, with headquarters in Geneva, and offices in some 115 countries. More than 80 percent of UNHCR's 5,000-member staff work in the field, often in isolated, dangerous and difficult conditions. The UNHCR has twice been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for its work.



United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (UNHCHR)
http://www.unhcr.ch/

The focal point for the activities of the United Nations in the field of human rights is located in Geneva at the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR).



International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC)

http://www.ohchr.org/EN/Pages/WelcomePage.aspx

The IFRC is one part of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, which comprises National Red Cross or Red Crescent Societies, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (the Federation), and the ICRC.


Friday, May 09, 2008

Myanma Update





Almost a week after a devastating cyclone hit low-lying areas of southern Burma, hundreds of thousands of people are still in urgent




Burma warned over cyclone delays




The US has ships with aid standing by in the Gulf of Thailand




The United Nations Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon, has warned of dire consequences if foreign aid workers continue to be denied access to Burma.




Speaking before the UN launched its $187m (£96m) appeal to help those hit by the cyclone, he said early action was needed to prevent catastrophe.




Burma, where the UN fears the death toll could reach 100,000, says it will accept aid from any quarter.




No contact


Aid agencies already in Burma say they have been doing what they can, but are frustrated by the government's reluctance to allow international aid teams into the country and its insistence on distributing aid itself.




EXTENT OF THE DEVASTATION






The UN believes as many as 1.5 million people could have been affected by Cyclone Nargis, which struck on 3 May, and many say Burma does not have the capacity to respond adequately on its own.




Two BBC correspondents who have travelled to the Irrawaddy delta say tens of thousands of bodies are strewn across the landscape, with houses toppled and trees uprooted.




They say diseases like dysentery are already starting to take hold, and although some aid has arrived there is still no relief effort to match the size of the catastrophe.

Tuesday, May 06, 2008

Tens of thousands killed in Myanmar cyclone































A map showing areas worst-hit by Tropical Cyclone Nargis. Aid workers battled Wednesday to get food and water to desperate cyclone survivors in Myanmar, whose government is under fire after more than 22,000 people died in one of Asia's worst natural disasters.

(AFP/Graphic)






















Reuters
Wed May 7, 12:52 AM ET



A Thai air force personnel waits for load food and disaster supplies for shipment to Myanmar at the military airport in Bangkok May 7, 2008. Disease, hunger and thirst pose a major threat to hundreds of thousands of survivors of Cyclone Nargis, aid agencies said on Wednesday, urging Myanmar's military rulers to open the doors to international humanitarian relief. With 22,500 dead and 41,000 missing, most of them from a massive storm surge that washed over the Irrawaddy delta, it is the most devastating cyclone to hit Asia since 1991, when 143,000 people died in neighbouring Bangladesh. .


REUTERS/Sukree Sukplang (THAILAND)





http://news.yahoo.com/nphotos/Tens-thousands-killed-Myanmar-cyclone-Yangon/ss/events/wl/050408myanmarcylcone/s:/ap/20080507/ap_on_re_as/myanmar_cyclone#photoViewer=/080507/ids_photos_wl/r4260609060.jpg