The Black Collegian Online
Jobs
 • Search Job Bank
 • Post Resumé
 • My Account
 • For Employers
Channels
 • Graduate/
Professional School
 • What's Happening
 • African-American Issues
 • Global Study
 • Career Related
 • X-Tra Curricular
 • About Us / Site Charter
 • Monthly Issues
 • BC Home
Employer Profiles
 • Site Charter Sponsors
 • Employer Profiles
 • Site Sponsors
Cornerstones
Subscribe
Pick up a free copy
of THE BLACK
COLLEGIAN
Magazine from your
career services
office, or subscribe
here
.

 

What's Happening

Radio One, Inc. Helps Raise $75,000 For Mozambique
Stepping up to the plate on Thursday, March 16, 2000, citizens from the Baltimore Metropolitan Area, spearheaded by Radio One, Inc., displayed an outstanding gesture of giving when they raised over  $75,000.00 for flood victims in Mozambique.  The event took place at Cathy Hughes Plaza located at the corners of St. Paul and Fayette Streets in downtown Baltimore City, Maryland. For those of you who missed the event, donations are still urgently needed. 

Radio One, Inc., based in Baltimore, is represented by WOLB 1010AM, Magic 95.9FM, Spirit 1400 AM and 92Q Jams.

Mozambique Ambassador & Doc CheathamRepublic of Mozambique Ambassador Marcos G. Namashulua, pictured at left with Phi Beta Sigma National Director of Social Action, Marvin L. 'Doc' Cheatham, Sr., thanked all of the contributors and particularly Radio One, Inc. for its much-needed assistance.

The flooding in Mozamique began on February 11 when the first cyclone hit.  More than 200,000 acres of farmland are under water and 141 schools have been destroyed.  Deaths have been estimated as high as 1,000 with an estimated 600,000 people needing assistance.

Sadly enough global assistance to the Mozambique crisis has been slow and minimal.  Melvin Foote, Executive Director of the Constituency for Africa, registered a concern that it wasn’t’ until there was a great outcry that assistance began to come.”    Kenneth F. Hackett, executive director of Baltimore-based Catholic Relief Services, the overseas relief and development agency of the U.S. Catholic Church, wrote: “…it is now up to the United States to demonstrate it is a country of compassion and goodwill.”  Ambassador Namashulua has said, “…it was slow coming (U.S. Relief efforts).  Many people would have been saved had they responded sooner.” 

Marvin L. ‘Doc’ Cheatham, Sr., is quoted as saying, “…every one of us must search our hearts and pocket-books to help in a time of need.  The United Nations, the American Red Cross, and the United States of America can and must do more, better and sooner.  If this were Kosovo, China or Ireland - would there be any discussion about relief?  This country and its people, our brothers and sisters, deserve immediate and thorough relief.”

Red Cross Update on Mozambique

The floodwaters are receding in Mozambique and the rainy season will soon draw to a close - welcome news to the tens of thousands of flood refugees and the humanitarian aid agencies struggling to help them. But the planned pullout of international military aircraft has relief workers worried about delivering supplies to areas still cut off by the flooding.

The United States, Germany, and Malawi are expected to withdraw from the region as relief operations wind down. When they go, they'll take their helicopters and cargo aircraft with them - aircraft workers have relied on to deliver supplies.

"Some roads are open, but there are other roads that are not," Aya Shneerson, spokesperson for the World Food Program, told Reuters. "There are a lot of island locations that are still dependent on helicopters."

Britain withdrew its military aircraft but continues to charter five private helicopters for relief missions. The South African Air Force, which won praise for its rescues of people stranded in trees and on rooftops, is expected to decide this week how much longer it would remain. 

The United States, which has about 700 military personnel, six helicopters, nine fixed-wing aircraft, and other logistical equipment in the region, will pull out in phases as commercial aircraft take over. "Those planes will be cheaper than our stuff and it makes sense to switch to something more economical," U.S. Air Force spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel Tom Dolney told Reuters.

Aid Workers Focus on Long Term

While emergency operations wind down, the long-term relief effort is about to begin. The U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) said Mozambique would need at least $13 million to help farmers rebuild homes and plant crops in flood-ravaged fields in time for the September harvest.

"There are more than 120,000 farmers and their families in desperate need of assistance in the southern and central provinces of Mozambique," said Anne M. Bauer, chief of FAO's special relief operations service. "They need emergency support so they can rebuild their homes and fields to start planting immediately and prepare for the main agricultural season, which begins next September."

Roads, irrigation systems, and farm equipment were badly damaged by the country's worst flooding in half a century. Many farm animals were drowned and animal disease control facilities were destroyed, Bauer said.

Almost 140,000 hectares of crops such as maize, beans, rice, sweet potatoes, groundnuts (peanuts), and vegetables have been ruined or seriously harmed, while many food and seed stocks were washed away.

FAO estimates that 350,000 cattle, goats, and sheep - between 70 to 80 percent of the livestock in the affected areas - have died or been seriously injured in the flood. Animal diseases, which have become a significant threat since the flood as stray cattle drink from stagnant, contaminated water, could kill more.

While money from the $13 million appeal will go to rebuilding the agricultural infrastructure and economy, the FAO will also use the funds for the most basic of emergency relief efforts--they will jump-start the long-term relief operation by providing seeds and tools to the farmers.

As the emergency phase of the relief operation comes to an end, other relief agencies are now beginning to focus on the continuing recovery of the affected population. The Red Cross, for example, is looking at the long-term rehabilitation needs of Mozambique, with the same priority of providing seeds and tools before the planting season ends.

Red Cross Also Focuses on Zimbabwe 

Beyond helping Mozambique's flood refugees, the Red Cross is also hard at work in Zimbabwe, a southern African country also deluged by the late-February floods. The situation remains critical in some areas of Zimbabwe, especially where accessibility is still difficult.

The cash-strapped country is struggling with a longtime, nationwide fuel crisis and helicopters are not available for delivering supplies. The floods affected more than 100,000 people, and 20,000 are still homeless.

In the worst affected areas, the water washed away entire villages, including livestock and food reserves. The home of Siphiwe Shakara, near Masvingo, vanished in seconds as a torrent of water rushed through her village. A mother of five who is caring for an additional seven relatives, Shakara is worried about food shortages.

"I thank the Red Cross for the food that we get," she said. "But they are the only ones to help us and it is not enough. The wet maize is rotting in the fields. If the rain stopped, I would dry whatever is still good for eating.

But this is in God's hands, not mine." 

Delivering food to the flooded communities has been difficult with many bridges and roads washed away. The displaced are forced to walk for hours through swamps and mud to get food, blankets, and tents.

Despite the logistical problems, the Zimbabwe Red Cross corps of volunteers is growing. Elisabeth Chinyangarara, program coordinator of the Masvingo Red Cross branch, said she is recruiting more and more volunteers every day. "Some would like to join because they think they will get food everyday, but the vast majority are willing to help just to express solidarity."

How You Can Help

Contact:
Hon. Marvin L. ‘Doc’ Cheatham, Sr.
National Director of Social Action 
Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Inc.
1620 N. Appleton Street
Baltimore, Maryland 21217-1114

Business (410) 962-2931 or (410) 396-5570
Fax (410) 962-8747

*E-mail: SocialActProg@pbs1914.org
Personal Web Page http://www.afamerica.com/sigma

You may also make a secure online credit card donation directly to the American Red Cross International Response Fund. To contribute directly to the Mozambique relief effort, call 1-800-HELP NOW (1-800-435-7669) or 1-800-257-7575 (Spanish). Or you may send your donation to your local Red Cross or to the American Red Cross, P.O. Box 37243, Washington, D.C. 20013. To earmark your check for this disaster, write Mozambique in the memo section.


 

[top of page]

Graduate/Professional SchoolWhat's Happening
Military Opportunity Job BankAfrican-American IssuesGlobal Study
X-Tra CurricularAbout Us /Site CharterMonthly IssuesHome

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
THE BLACK COLLEGIAN MAGAZINE © 2006

IMDiversity, Inc.

 
Must stay for legacy purposes