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June 19, 2013, 12:16:46
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Topic: Tsunami Relief efforts...  (Read 1215 times)
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« on: December 30, 2004, 21:52:16 »
AplusWebMaster Offline
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FYI...

- http://www.techweb.com/article/printableArticle.jhtml?articleID=56800125&site_section=700029
December 30, 2004
"As the death toll for Sunday's earthquake and tsunami topped 114,000 Thursday, the technology industry stepped up its donations and its efforts to help individuals pledge money to victim relief organizations. The devastation, which began with a 9.0 magnitude earthquake in the seabed off the Indonesian coast, was mostly caused by the resulting tsunami that inundated shorelines in east Africa, India, Sir Lanka, Thailand, Indonesia, and other countries in the Indian Ocean basin. Thousands are still missing, and millions are homeless and without basic necessities, such as food and clean drinking water.

Among the technology companies that have pitched in with major contributions are Cisco, Computer Associates, and Symbol Technologies. Networking giant, Cisco, for instance, has pledged a total of $2.5 million for humanitarian relief and reconstruction efforts. The total includes $1 million contributed by the company, a minimum of another $1 million from the San Jose, Calif.-based company's non-profit foundation to match employee donations, and $460,000 donated so far by employees. "We are a global company with a strong presence in Asia, and we see it as our responsibility to help the local communities where we have employees, customers, and partners rebuild after this tragedy," said John Chambers, the company's president and chief executive officer, in a statement. Cisco will also provide communications equipment to the stricken areas where the normal infrastructure is destroyed so that relief organizations can communicate from the disaster zones.

Computer Associates has donated $200,000 directly to UNICEF's (United Nations Children's Fund) relief efforts, but will also match two-for-one any money given by employees to international aid organizations. Symbol Technologies contributed to UNICEF too, but also targeted the American Red Cross and the Mercy Corps, a United States- and Scotland-based consortium of humanitarian relief groups, with its $150,000 donation.

Although Microsoft itself hasn't announced a corporate donation, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, funded by company chairman Bill Gates and managed by his wife Melinda, has pledged $3.5 million to relief work in the tsunami-stricken area.

Other names in the technology field are jumping into relief efforts, typically by making it easier for individuals to contribute. Mega-retailer Amazon.com, for instance, said it had collected over $5 million as of midday Thursday for the American Red Cross via a link on its front page. Similar links have been posted on the home pages of other major Web sites, including eBay, Yahoo, and MSN. Yahoo's front page, for instance, includes links to the online donation sites for Oxfam, UNICEF, AmeriCares, and Network for Good. Even the Spartan interface of Google -- which relies on just a few links and a single logo -- sports a relief addition. The "Ways to help with tsunami relief" link takes users to a page that lists 13 relief organizations' donation pages. One firm, AuctionDrop, took a different tack. The San Carlos, Calif.-based company, which accepts goods from consumers and posts them on eBay for selling, taking a commission on the sale, said it would donate 100 percent of the proceeds of sales of donated used and new cameras, computers, or consumer electronics to CARE's relief efforts. AuctionDrop operates from the 3,500 UPS Stores nationwide, where people can drop off their donated items."

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« Reply #1 on: December 31, 2004, 15:44:31 »
AplusWebMaster Offline
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FYI...

Red Cross Tsunami Victim Search Site Goes Down
- http://www.techweb.com/article/printableArticle.jhtml?articleID=56900068&site_section=700029
December 31, 2004
"A Web site created earlier this week by the International Red Cross to help relatives locate survivors of the Indian Ocean tsunami crashed Thursday under heavy loads, but is now back up and running. The site, which the Red Cross set up Wednesday, lets people in the affected countries -- Sri Lanka, India, Indonesia, Thailand, and several others -- register to let family elsewhere know they're safe and sound. Families can then search the list. Although the site is far from official -- the Red Cross disavowed all claims to accuracy -- it was brought down by heavy traffic Thursday, a spokesman told the Reuters news agency. "We have had a tremendous response...the system is partially down," the spokesman said to Reuters Thursday. The site rang up over 650,000 hits before becoming too sluggish to use, but by early morning Friday (Pacific time), the site was back up and operating normally.

The site has been especially important to European and American families, since thousands from those areas remain missing, including approximately 5,000 Europeans and an estimated 2,000 to 3,000 Americans. The (ICRC) FamilyLinks Web site can be found here:
>>> http://www.icrc.org/home.nsf/home/webfamilylinks#a9 ..."

Also:
- http://www.securitypipeline.com/shared/article/printablePipelineArticle.jhtml?articleId=56800122
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« Reply #2 on: January 03, 2005, 12:35:32 »
AplusWebMaster Offline
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FYI...

Three U.S. Presidents Urge U.S. Relief Aid
- http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=domesticNews&storyID=7223995
Jan 3, 2005
"President Bush brought together former presidents George Bush and Bill Clinton on Monday to launch an appeal for Americans to make a donation to help victims of the South Asia quake and tsunamis.

"I ask every American to contribute as they are able to do so," Bush said.

The president's father and Clinton will lead a bipartisan effort to seek out donations both large and small to provide relief assistance to millions left homeless by the Dec. 26 calamity that killed thousands in Indonesia, Sri Lanka, India and Thailand. "We are here to ask our fellow citizens to join in a broad humanitarian relief effort," said Bush, joined in the White House Roosevelt Room by his two immediate predecessors..."
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« Reply #3 on: January 05, 2005, 13:41:38 »
AplusWebMaster Offline
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FYI...

U.N. Warns Tsunami Death Toll Could Double
- http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=7247505
Jan 5, 2005
"The United Nations warned on Wednesday Asia's tsunami death toll could double to about 300,000 unless survivors received clean water and other basic services by the end of the week to prevent disease.

Secretary of State Colin Powell, in Indonesia for an emergency international aid summit on Thursday, flew over the worst scenes of devastation and said it was more horrifying than wars he had witnessed during decades as a soldier..."If basic needs ... are not urgently restored to all populations by the end of this week, WHO fears that outbreaks of infectious disease could result in a similar number of fatalities as occurred due to the direct impact of the tsunami," the U.N. agency said in a statement on the Internet. After getting a bird's-eye view of the battered northwest coastline of Indonesia's Sumatra island, Powell promised Washington would send more helicopters, food and clean water to isolated survivors of the tsunami. "I have been in war and I have been through a number of hurricanes, tornadoes and other relief operations, but I have never seen anything like this," said America's former top soldier. Powell, 67, served two combat tours in Vietnam during a 35-year military career that ended with his service as the country's military chief. "I cannot begin to imagine the horror that went through families and all of the people who heard this noise coming and then had their lives snuffed out by this wave," he said.

About two-thirds of the U.N. estimated 150,000 dead from the tsunami were killed in Aceh province on Sumatra..."
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« Reply #4 on: January 21, 2005, 23:08:57 »
AplusWebMaster Offline
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FYI...

Global Tsunami Death Toll Tops 226,000
http://today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2005-01-19T145650Z_01_SP286175_RTRIDST_0_INTERNATIONAL-QUAKE-DC.XML
Jan 19, 2005
"The global death toll from the Asian tsunami shot above 226,000 Wednesday after Indonesia's Health Ministry confirmed the deaths of tens of thousands of people previously listed as missing.
The ministry raised the country's death toll to 166,320. It had previously given a figure of 95,450 while Indonesia's Ministry of Social Affairs had put the death toll at around 115,000 before it stopped counting..."

...If it looks like this from up there (satellite photos):
- http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NewImages/images.php3?img_id=16782

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