Voices from the Field - IRC Blog

International Rescue Committee (IRC) Refugee, Staff & Volunteer Blog

Myanmar Disaster: “Snapped in two like match sticks”

Posted by Kate Sands Adams on 9 May, 2008

Myanmar Village cyclone destruction, Gordon Bacon, the IRC
Photo: Gordon Bacon/The IRC
This photo was sent from Myanmar today by my colleague Gordon Bacon, who’s coordinating IRC’s emergency response to the cyclone disaster.

Gordon says: “I saw hundreds of these massive concrete electric cable posts, snapped in two like match sticks. You can imagine what the storm did to thatch homes and the families that lived in them.”

How can you help? We’re accepting contributions to support IRC emergency relief programs and long-term recovery assistance in Myanmar.  Please click here to donate. (If you’re in the UK or Europe, please visit www.IRCuk.org to make a gift.)

Posted in Asia, emergencies, howtohelp, photos | Tagged: , , , | No Comments »

“It’s time to put politics aside” [This Week's Voices]

Posted by The IRC on 9 May, 2008

www.alertnet.org
Photo: Reuters, courtesy www.alertnet.org
A weekly round up of notable quotes from the news and the Web:

“You have to go in aggressive right away. The good news is that the government has called for international help and agencies like the IRC are now mobilizing to do that.  The international aid community knows how to do this if they are well-resourced.  I hope we will be in this instance. It’s time to put politics aside and get on the ground and help people.”

- Michael Kocher, IRC’s vice president of international programs, speaking to CNN about the need for a massive and well-planned response to the cyclone disaster in Myanmar.

“Everything hinges on access. Unless there’s a massive and fast infusion of aid, experts and supplies into the hardest-hit areas, there’s going to be a tragedy at an unimaginable scale.”

- Greg Beck, the IRC’s Thailand-based Asia regional director, in a statement about the cyclone response issued today by the IRC.

“I never had a chance to talk to any of my family members yet. I hope I will be able to talk with them very soon.”

- Tun Than, a Burmese case worker at IRC’s Baltimore refugee resettlement office, speaking with WMAR. Than hasn’t been able to reach his parents or other relatives in Myanmar since the cyclone hit.

“The magnitude of this disaster is worsening with every passing day. There is really a need for a massive response.”

- Melissa Winkler, IRC emergency communications director, speaking with the The San Francisco Chronicle.

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Myanmar Disaster: “Imagine the Horror”

Posted by The IRC on 7 May, 2008

myanmar courtesy www.alertnet.org
Photo: Courtesy www.alertnet.org

“Just imagine the horror of watching whole villages completely submerged and swept away. Now the survivors are homeless and desperate. They are seeking shelter in monasteries or just out wandering in search of any form of shelter from the elements. They say bodies are scattered throughout fields, school yards and roads. They have lost so many family members and neighbors and are very very worried about dwindling supplies of food and water.”

- Greg Beck, the International Rescue Committee’s Asia regional director, speaking in Thailand, where he is organizing IRC’s emergency response to the cyclone disaster in Myanmar.

IRC emergency experts have rushed to the region to assess needs and launch lifesaving assistance for survivors. You can donate to IRC’s emergency response here.

Posted in Asia, emergencies, howtohelp, news | Tagged: , , , , , , , | 4 Comments »

Award-winning Photo from Darfur: “A Chance to Learn”

Posted by The IRC on 2 May, 2008

A Chance to learn, Kalma camp, Darfur Gerald Martone/The IRC
Photo: Gerald Martone/The IRC
Congratulations to Gerald Martone, IRC director of humanitarian affairs, who has won this year’s Outstanding Photo Prize in the annual photography contest organized by InterAction, a coalition of 160 U.S.-based humanitarian groups. The photo, entitled, “A Chance to Learn: Time for Class in a Refugee Camp,” depicts young children at the Kalma Camp in South Darfur, Sudan. There were four other prize winners and a grand prize winner.

You can learn about the IRC’s work in the Darfur region and see more photos and video here.

Posted in Africa, Darfur, children, education, photos | Tagged: , , , , , | 1 Comment »

“They are no longer a stranger, they are your teammate” [This Week's Voices]

Posted by The IRC on 2 May, 2008

soccer
An IRC soccer camp for young refugees in Oakland, CA  Photo: Lauren Markham/The IRC
This week’s round-up of notable quotes from the news and the Web:

“I think that when we meet someone that does not look like us and speaks a different language, they are automatically different and that they are a stranger. And then you bring them on a soccer field and they are no longer a stranger, they are your teammate.”

- Brooke Blanchard, an AmeriCorps volunteer with the IRC’s resettlement office in Salt Lake City, in NBC affiliate KKSL’s report on a soccer game organized by the IRC between a local team and refugee youth.

“It’s tough enough being a teenager. Adding the challenge of learning a new language and adjusting to a new culture and way of life can increase the students’ frustration. The one place that the field is level is on the sports field and court — no language required — just get out there and play!”

- Christine Piranio, IRC student education coordinator in San Diego. IRC AmeriCorps Literacy Teacher in San Diego Lee Gerston, quoted Christine in a letter to ESPN’s Page 2 blog describing the girls’ basketball program for refugees run by the IRC.

“There’s naturally a period of transition and adjustment once they arrive to the US, especially for children. Some of these kids have known nothing but refugee camp life, so when they come to the US they’re expected to sit in a classroom, follow a routine they may not be used to.”

- Christine Petrie, IRC deputy vice president for resettlement, speaking with BBC News, which featured a Bhutanese refugee family resettled by the IRC in New York on its Web site.

“They have been traumatized. They feel as if they absolutely cannot go home and they have nowhere to turn. It hits you right in the gut. And it is outrageous that so little is being done about it internationally.”

- Michael Kocher, acting IRC vice president for international programs, speaking about the Iraqi refugee crisis in a feature on The NewsHour about Iraqis seeking refuge in the U.S. after working for American forces.

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