The WORLD is with you!

Huey Dewey Louie

Earning My Ears
Joined
Aug 31, 2005
Messages
14
According to reuters there are many countries who will help.
Japan, Germany, Canada, UK, France, Australia - even Venezuela and Honduras - and more to follow!

The only thing I cannot understand is Bush's statement "I'm not expecting much from foreign nations because we hadn't asked for it. I do expect a lot of sympathy and perhaps some will send cash dollars. But this country's going to rise up and take care of it,"
Does he want to reject help???

Private donations also are on it's way - so you're not alone!
 
Well a big thank you to all who have offered assitance and/or support in any form. On a personal level, I greatly appreciate it.
 
I wish I could have paid more attention but I heard on the news a long list of countries that have offered help, I remember Russia and the Dominican Republic among them also. I was a little surprised because some of the countries that offered help are not what you may call wealthy (as in: are very poor).
 
Huey said:
According to reuters there are many countries who will help.
Japan, Germany, Canada, UK, France, Australia - even Venezuela and Honduras - and more to follow!

The only thing I cannot understand is Bush's statement "I'm not expecting much from foreign nations because we hadn't asked for it. I do expect a lot of sympathy and perhaps some will send cash dollars. But this country's going to rise up and take care of it,"
Does he want to reject help???

Private donations also are on it's way - so you're not alone!


Can you provide links? I'm so sick of getting the forwarded e-mails complaining about "where is the international aid???" and I'd love to have a comeback.
 

I saw it on Fox or BBC News. Help from Venezuela has of course been rejected.
 
Why do you think it is that the US governement won't accept offers of help when they quite clearly cannot get a grip on the sitaution. :confused3
 
Catherine, a few days before Katrina, Venezuela offered us "cheap oil", it was done after some days of diplomatic tension with Chavez, and the offer was taken as a sarcastic comment.
Maybe this time the aid Chavez is offering is more sincere, because I bet the people of NOLA are too hungry, tired and desperate to care where the help comes from or the "politics" behind it.
 
Don't know what Bush meant by his statement but Condaleeza Rice said yesterday "No aid that will help the affected areas will be rejected". Lets hope so.
 
Well Canada has again offered help here is the second report of the offer.

OTTAWA (CP) - Canada will send the United States any help needed in the aftermath of hurricane Katrina, Prime Minister Paul Martin told President George W. Bush on Thursday.

"If you need help, just ask and we'll be there," he told Bush in a 15-minute phone call that was to have been a sharp discussion of the softwood lumber dispute but instead became a call of sympathy and condolence. Martin said Bush didn't ask for help, but predicted he will.

"They're in the process of trying to put all the co-ordination together and they're going to take us up on it," the prime minister said in Edmonton.

"They're trying to determine their needs right now."

White House spokesman Scott McLellan said a number of countries have offered aid.

"We are open to all offers of assistance from other nations, and I would expect that we would take people up on offers of assistance when it's necessary."

The Canadian military put troops on standby and prepared to load a ship with gear and equipment that could be useful in the aftermath of the great storm that wrecked much of the American Gulf Coast and devastated New Orleans.

The Canadian Red Cross was sending a team of 100 to 200 experienced disaster workers to bolster the American Red Cross staff in the region.

Martin, attending provincial centennial celebrations in Edmonton, told a sympathetic crowd of his talk with Bush.

"I expressed our condolences and our sympathies and I confirmed Canada stands with those who have suffered so much in Katrina's wake.

"I said on your behalf that, if you need help, just ask and we'll be there, now and in the weeks and months ahead. That we will do whatever we can for as long as it takes to help our neighbour and our friend deal with this terrible, terrible tragedy."

Gen. Rick Hillier, chief of the Canadian defence staff, said he spoke with his American counterpart, Gen. Dick Myers, to offer assistance.

He said Myers thanked him, but said the Pentagon is still analyzing what is needed.

Hillier said the military's Disaster Assistance Response Team or DART, which can provide medical care, power and clean water, could head south on 48 hours notice.

He said Canada could provide transport planes or helicopters, electrical generators, water purification systems, small boats for navigating the waterways of the region and engineering equipment and expertise.

He said his staff are planning to load a selection of such gear about a warship to be ready in the event Washington asks for help.

It's best to be prepared, he said.

"We want to help. We believe that's what being friends and allies is all about."

In September 1992, after hurricane Andrew struck Florida, a Canadian naval supply ship was sent in with more than 250 people who helped in rebuilding.

Suzanne Charest of the Canadian Red Cross said a team of 100 - perhaps as many as 200 - volunteers is being assembled for relief work.

"We're recruiting only from our existing pool of experienced people," she said.

The workers will help with the logistics of moving and supporting relief workers. They will assist with family services among the homeless and displaced and in feeding people in some of the 270 shelters being run by the American Red Cross.

"They are providing 500,000 hot meals a day in conjunction with the Southern Baptists," Charest said.

The Red Cross is also collecting cash donations for the relief work.

She said the American Red Cross estimated its operations will cost more than $130 million.

"That's without having done a full assessment."

Foreign Affairs says people who wish to send help should contribute to a reputable aid agency, such as the Red Cross.

Canada has also offered to open up its national emergency stockpiles if needed. They contain portable hospital units, complete with beds, blankets and pharmaceuticals.

Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty has spoken to David Wilkins, the American ambassador, to offer help.

The province's health ministry has offered an emergency medical team and various hydro operations have offered teams skilled in restoring power. Hundreds of thousands are without electricity in the region.
 
Fidel Castro has offered to help by sending 11,000 doctors. :eek:
 


Disney Vacation Planning. Free. Done for You.
Our Authorized Disney Vacation Planners are here to provide personalized, expert advice, answer every question, and uncover the best discounts. Let Dreams Unlimited Travel take care of all the details, so you can sit back, relax, and enjoy a stress-free vacation.
Start Your Disney Vacation
Disney EarMarked Producer






DIS Facebook DIS youtube DIS Instagram DIS Pinterest DIS Tiktok DIS Twitter

Add as a preferred source on Google

Back
Top Bottom