Friday, January 15, 2010

Haiti

Knew some folks who were deployed there.  Sounds like it was a hell-hole in the best of times.

At last word "USSOCOM" had gotten the Port au Prince airport opened, after it was clogged with aircraft that the airport lacked the equipment to unload.  (I assume that, in this case, the Special Operations Command troops included Air Force Combat Controllers, although I could be wrong.)

Also at last word, 5 Haitian amateur radio operators were operational.  Following are a couple of messages I received through ham channels:

Please keep the following frequencies clear for use by relief workers in Haiti:
  • 14.265 SATERN (Salvation Army) Health & Welfare
  • 7.045 Net in operation
  • 7.265 SATERN
  • 3.977 SATERN
  • 3.720 Net in operation
Members of my club say they were monitoring these freqs--some of them are used for regular nets--and the air waves seem to be full of "lids" engaging in such lid-like activity as calling and tuning, endlessly, or even "just" keying their mikes for the heck of it.

SATERN is the Salvation Army Team Emergency Radio Network; earlier they were being monitored on the 'net:

If you're interested in listening in on the Salvation Army Team Emergency Radio Network (SATERN) net out of the Southeast handing health and welfare traffic, and you're not near an HF rig, try tuning your web browser to http://www.ustream.tv/channel/shackfeed
 Here's the ARRL Bulletin on the situation (IARU is the International Amateur Radio Union)

REVISED Jan 13, 2010 13:45 ET
IARU Region 2 Requests Frequencies Be Kept Clear After Massive Earthquake Strikes Haiti
On Tuesday, January 12 at 4:53 PM Haiti time (2153 UTC), a magnitude 7.0 earthquake hit 10 miles (15 kilometers) west of Port-au-Prince, the island nation's capital. Communications in and out of Haiti have been disrupted. No word has been received as of yet from any of Haitian Amateur Radio operators. The ARRL encourages US amateurs to be aware of the emergency operations on the following frequencies: 7.045 and 3.720 MHz (IARU Region 2 nets), 14.265, 7.265 and 3.977 MHz (SATERN nets), and 14.300 MHz (Intercontinental Assistance and Traffic Net); the International Radio Emergency Support Coalition (IRESC) is also active on EchoLink node 278173.
IARU Region 2 Area C Emergency Coordinator, Arnie Coro, CO2KK, is coordinating a multi-national response by hams. There are organized nets on 7.045 and 3.720 MHz; amateurs are asked to monitor the frequencies, but to also keep them clear of non-essential traffic. Amateur Radio operators should also be aware that emergency traffic pertaining to the Haitian earthquake is expected on the SATERN frequencies of 14.265 MHz, 7.265 MHz and 3977 MHz, according to SATERN's leader, Major Pat McPherson. The Salvation Army is accepting health and welfare traffic requests on its Web site.
"As late as 9:45 PM local time (0245 UTC), we have not been able to contact any amateur or emergency services stations in Haiti," Coro said in an e-mail. "Amateurs from Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico and Venezuela are monitoring the 40 meter band frequency. We are still keeping watch on 7.045 MHz, hoping that someone in Haiti may have access to a transceiver and at least a car battery to run it," but so far, no HH stations have checked in. Tuesday's quake was felt in the Dominican Republic, which shares the island of Hispaniola with Haiti, and in Eastern Cuba, but no major damage was reported in either place.
The January 13 edition of The Daily DX reported that the Rev John Henault, HH6JH, made contact late Wednesday morning with the Intercontinental Assistance and Traffic Net (IATN) on 14.300 MHz; this is the IARU Global Center of Activity frequency for emergency communications. He said that he was safe, but had no power and no phone service. He was operating on battery power and hoping to get a generator running later in the day. The edition also noted that Pierre Petry, HH2/HB9AMO -- who was in Cap Haitien (about 140 km north of Port-au-Prince) is "okay"; Petry is in Haiti working for the United Nations World Food Program. Later today, he will be traveling to the capital.
The UN's 9000 peacekeepers in Haiti -- many of whom are from Brazil -- were distracted from aid efforts by their own tragedy: Many spent the night hunting for survivors in the ruins of their headquarters. "It would appear that everyone who was in the building, including my friend Hedi Annabi, the United Nations' Secretary General's special envoy, and everyone with him and around him, are dead," French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said Wednesday, speaking on French radio. UN peacekeeping chief Alain Le Roy would not confirm that Annabi was dead, but said he was among more than 100 people missing in the rubble of its headquarters. He said only about 10 people had been pulled out, many of them badly injured. Fewer than five bodies had been pulled from the rubble, he said. The United Nations said the capital's main airport was "fully operational" and that relief flights would begin on Wednesday, January 13.
The situation in Haiti is still chaotic. More information will be posted as soon as possible. Information is being validated and shared between many amateur groups and news sources as it unfolds.

Much nonsense, of course.  Every "journalist" who can get airtime is trying for a Pulitzer.  Con artists and scammers are said to be poised to milk it for every dime, as are politicians, or are they the same?  Some televangelist is said to have proclaimed that this is God's punishment for Haiti's devil-worship, which I imagine is a reference to Vodou, or Voodoo.  Some twits are wondering why the US Navy didn't have a ship there right away--apparently, just because the aircraft on the USS Carl Vinson are capable of super-sonic flight, it is assumed that CVN-70 herself is, too...

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