Join Us To Help Haiti Earthquake Victims Today
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Branson performers and fans alike have always been quick to donate assistance when asked. The people of Haiti need the financial assistance of everyone right now… TODAY!
There are many ways to assist financially so that your donation will instantly be available to those who can put it to great use… TODAY!
Here are two easy ways to donate…
If you have a text enabled cell phone, text the word Haiti to 90999 and $10.00 will be added to your phone bill to go directly to the Red Cross Haiti fund… TODAY!
Or… click on the Help Haiti Now image and contribute to The World Food Programme. They are sending food and other necessary provisions to Haiti, a country that has suffered recently from hunger, malnutrition, high food prices, hurricanes and now one of the worst earthquakes ever to strike the region.
Here are ten facts that give the measure of the hunger crisis facing Haiti, an island nation which was already stalked by hunger and malnutrition even before the earthquake struck.
- Assessments show that 3 million people may need humanitarian relief, including food assistance, in the wake of the earthquake.
- Even before the quake, 1.9 million people were ‘food insecure’, meaning they needed assistance to stave off hunger.
- Only 50 percent of Haiti population has access to safe drinking water.
- Some 55 percent of Haiti’s 9 million people live below the poverty line of US$1 a day.
- Rural households spend almost 60 percent of their income on food; the poorest groups spend more than 70 percent.
- Chronic malnutrition affects 24 percent of children under five, rising as high as 40 percent in the poorest zones.
- Poor diet means many women and children suffer from micronutrient deficiencies. Anaemia affects 59 percent of children between the ages of six months and 5 years.
- During 2008, high food and fuel prices triggered violent demonstrations and political upheaval.
- In the same year, three hurricanes and one tropical storm struck Haiti, killing 800 people, destroying 27,000 homes and raising the general level of hunger.
- Food prices have declined since September 2008, but remain higher than the four-year average.
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