Monday, January 18, 2010

Haiti Relief Workers Risk Their Minds, Experts Say

How do I know these things?

Sunday, January 17, 2010

With humanitarian missions into Haiti, they will carry memories of combat with them


Experience mostly and too many years of studying it. It is also one of the things crisis workers train for the most. When you respond to a crisis, usually you are responding to take care of the caregivers and this is done for a reason. If they fall apart, the people they trained to help will not be helped the next time. The responders need to be cared for because of all they encounter with survivors.

Each time I go to a conference or training session, we focus on responders knowing they will be drained of everything they have and no amount of training can prepare them for everything. We end up getting drained as well and some of us burn out but we are dealing with a totally different type of person. We are dealing with the caregivers instead of the victim/survivors. Some Chaplains do train to work with the survivors as well with each one following where they are called to be. This is done because we finally understand the price paid by the responders to disasters caused by nature and traumatic events caused by man.

No matter where we come from or language we speak, no matter what our income is or the color of our skin, we are all humans and our bodies, our minds, all work the same way with the same basic needs. We are all human and it is the basis for the outpouring of aid for the people of Haiti. We all see the human face of all they are going thru and most of us, well, we know how we would feel if we were going thru the same.

My greatest concern is for the responders, especially the men and women in the military after what they are carrying with them from Iraq and Afghanistan. For many, it will be healing but for too many they are not prepared for what is to come on this humanitarian mission.

What is very heartening about this report is that the media acknowledge this considering the days of reporting on the people of Haiti, they found time to report on this aspect few ever see.


Haiti Relief Workers Risk Their Minds, Experts Say
Even Aid Workers May Be At Risk for Mental Issues After Witnessing Destruction
By LAUREN COX
ABC News Medical Unit
Jan. 18, 2010
As more medical and rescue teams arrive in Haiti , mental health experts say these volunteers and soldiers may be risking not just their safety, but the sanctity of their own minds in the earthquake-shattered capital Port-au-Prince.

Stefano Zannini, head of mission Doctors Without Borders said the streets of Haiti are crowded with people looking for help. "They're trying to find their families or their friends. I can see thousands of them walking the stress asking for help." At night, they sleep on the streets covered with blankets or plastic bags.

As of Friday, Zannini expected more people would be pulled from the rubble alive. But as the citizens of Haiti search for family members, for food or for medical care, the government of Haiti has already sent trucks around the city to pick up dead bodies.
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Haiti Relief Workers Risk Their Minds, Experts Say

Wrongly convicted GI likely to get $7.5 million

Wrongly convicted GI likely to get $7.5 million

The Associated Press
Posted : Monday Jan 18, 2010 11:20:11 EST

MANHATTAN, Kan. — A former Fort Riley soldier who served 10 years in prison for a rape he didn’t commit will receive a $7.5 million settlement, if the defendants approve the proposal.

Eddie James Lowery was convicted in 1982 of raping an Ogden woman. He served 10 years in prison before DNA testing proved he did not commit the crime. He was paroled in 1991.
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Wrongly convicted GI likely to get 7.5 million

Police need help:Road rage leaves two year old girl shot

2-year-old girl shot in Tacoma road rage incident
By KOMO Staff
TACOMA, Wash. - A 2-year-old girl was shot in the leg during a road rage incident Sunday afternoon in southeast Tacoma.

Emergency personnel were called to the 600 block of E. 56th Street after 2 p.m., said Tacoma Fire Department spokesperson Jolene Davis.

Tacoma police spokesman Mark Fulghum said the driver of a black Ford Explorer became embroiled in a road rage incident with another vehicle that had a family inside.
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http://www.komonews.com/news/local/81934212.html

Local church to cops: 'We have your back'

Here is something every community should do as well.

Local church to cops: 'We have your back'
By Ray Lane
MILL CREEK, Wash. - A Snohomish County church dedicated its Sunday service to those who serve. It was a chance to honor the fallen officers - and salute those who are still on the streets.

The Rev. Dan Kellogg of Gold Creek Community Church says he got the idea after he learned that the morale of officers in his own congregation was low.

The killing of five police officers and a sheriff's deputy in a span of less than two months had taken its toll - so many funerals, so much heartbreak.

"There's this atmosphere where there's a target painted on officers' backs," Rev. Kellogg said. "And it just seems like we should not have that in our community. This should not be, and we can do something about it."
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http://www.komonews.com/news/local/81937947.html

Soldier guilty of cruelty and maltreatment in Iraq

Soldier guilty of cruelty and maltreatment in Iraq
By JoANNE VIVIANO Associated Press Writer
Posted: 01/18/2010 08:34:16 AM PST
Updated: 01/18/2010 10:39:12 AM PST


COLUMBUS, Ohio—A military panel in Kuwait convicted a U.S. soldier of being cruel and mistreating fellow soldiers, a case undertaken after an Army private from Ohio committed suicide in Iraq.
Staff Sgt. Enoch Chatman, of West Covina, Calif., was convicted Wednesday on two violations of the cruelty and maltreatment article of the Uniform Code of Military Justice, said Lt. Col. Kevin Olson, a military spokesman in Iraq.

Chatman was one of four soldiers accused of mistreating others in their platoon in Iraq through verbal abuse, physical punishment and ridicule of other soldiers.

The investigation was prompted by the August death of Pvt. Keiffer Wilhelm, who grew up in Willard in northwest Ohio.

Wilhelm, 19, was in Iraq with his new platoon for just 10 days before he killed himself. His family believes he was treated so badly that he took his own life, but the military has determined there was no direct evidence the four soldiers' misconduct caused the death.
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Soldier guilty of cruelty and maltreatment in Iraq