I suspect Americans are doing far better than Cubans on the non-government part 
of assistance to Haitians.  There will likely be hundreds of millions of 
dollars raised voluntarily by the American people to be used by 
non-governmental organizations.  Further, I'm almost certain that the 
government of Cuba, having impoverished its economy through dictatorial 
socialism, will be unable to provide the critical logistics and communications 
support the relief organizations and Haitian people need.


From: Harland Harrison 
Sent: Saturday, January 16, 2010 10:28 AM
To: [email protected] 
Cc: groupcalibs ; LPSF Discussion List ; [email protected] 
Subject: [CALibs] Fwd: Cuba is Missing - Or Is It?


  


      --- On Fri, 1/15/10, Scott Bidstrup <[email protected]> wrote:


        From: Scott Bidstrup <[email protected]>
        Subject: Cuba is Missing - Or Is It?
        Date: Friday, January 15, 2010, 11:01 PM


        All,

        Cuba is missing, alright, primarily from the list of nations to which 
the Fawning Corporate Media in the United States is willing to pay respect.

        What it is not missing from, is the list of first responder nations to 
the Haiti emergency.  Contrary to what Fox News has reported, it has not only 
responded by sending medical help, but it was one of the first to do so.  Cuba, 
hit frequently by hurricanes as it is, knows how to deal with emergencies, and 
is doing so very effectively.  It was one of the first to land medical help 
into the affected area, having sent 30 in addition to the 400 it already had 
there.

        And its people have responded - I know, because I can listen (7045 
Khz.) to the efforts of the ham radio operators in Cuba, providing emergency 
communications into the affected area - and doing so with more efficiency and 
effectiveness than anyone else, including such experienced U.S. groups as the 
Salvation Army.

        Scott

        ====

        Cuba is Missing...From US Reports on the International Response to 
Haiti’s Earthquake
        Dave Lindorff

        http://www.smirkingchimp.com/thread/26095

        There are only two US media outlets that have reported on Cuba’s 
response to the deadly 7.0 earthquake that hit Haiti. One was Fox News, which 
claimed, wrongly, that the Cubans were absent from the list of neighboring 
Caribbean countries providing aid. The other was the Christian Science Monitor 
(a respected news organization that recently shut down its print edition), 
which reported correctly that Cuba had dispatched 30 doctors to the stricken 
nation.

        The Christian Science Monitor, in a second article, quoted Laurence 
Korb, former assistant secretary of defense and now based at the Center for 
American Progress, as saying that the US, which is leading the relief efforts 
in Haiti, should “consider tapping the expertise of neighboring Cuba,” which he 
noted, “has some of the best doctors in the world--we should see about flying 
them in.”

        As for the rest of the US media, they have simply ignored Cuba.

        In fact, left unmentioned is the reality that Cuba already had over 400 
doctors posted to Haiti to help with the day-to-day health needs of this 
poorest nation in the Americas, and that those doctors were the first to 
respond to the disaster, setting up a hospital right next to the main hospital 
in Port-au-Prince which collapsed in the earthquake.

        Far from “doing nothing” about the disaster as the right-wing 
propagandists at Fox-TV were claiming, Cuba has been one of the most effective 
and critical responders to the crisis, because it had set up a medical 
infrastructure before the quake, which was able to mobilize quickly and start 
treating the victims.

        The American emergency response, predictably, has focussed primarily, 
at least in terms of personnel and money, on sending the hugely costly and 
inefficient US military--a fleet of aircraft and an aircraft carrier--a factor 
that should be considered when examining that $100 million figure the Obama 
administration claims is being allocated to emergency aid to Haiti. Considering 
that the cost of operating an aircraft carrier, including crew, is roughly $2 
million a day, just sending a carrier to Port-au-Prince for two weeks accounts 
for a quarter of the announced American aid effort, and while many of the 
military personnel sent there will certainly be doing actual aid work, 
delivering supplies and guarding supplies, many, given America’s long history 
of brutal military/colonial control of Haiti, will inevitably be spending their 
time ensuring continued survival and control of the parasitic pro-US political 
elite in Haiti.

        Otherwise, the US has basically ignored the ongoing day-to-day human 
crisis in Haiti, while Cuba has been doing the yeoman work of providing basic 
health care.

        But that’s not a story that the American corporate media want to tell.
     








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