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January 29, 2010

Friday January 29th Kiss-N-Grind: The Grammy Edition

Filed under Events, featuredevents

Kiss-N-Grind: The Grammy Edition

Featuring 2010 Grammy Nominees Eric Roberson, The Foreign Exchange, Robert Glasper and Bilal,
plus special guests… On Stage LIVE!

Also featuring special guest dj sets by
Questlove
Chad Hugo (Neptunes/N.E.R.D) + Hip Hop Dan
As Missile Command

Curated and Hosted by 2008 Nominee Vikter Duplaix and the vivacious Dj Rashida.

Prepare yourselves for the ultimate live and dj soulful sound experience.

Friday Jan 29th, 2010

Club 740
753 S. Spring St. Downtown LA. (Enter via alley at 8th & Spring)
9p to 3a

$20 Limited Pre-Sale available at kissngrind.even…

$30 Door.

Dress Fly but Ready to Party (Gents no baseball hats tonight)

VIP/Media inquries : info@kissngrind…
For Booth and Bottle Service Call 213 627 6277

Come Early. Play Late.

Give to the Haiti Relief Effort

Yele Haiti
Text YELE to 501501 to donate $5
co.clickandpled…

American Red Cross
tinyurl.com/y9d…

World Vision Org
tinyurl.com/yer…

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January 27, 2010

Crowds seeking aid in Haiti met with pepper spray and rubber bullets

Filed under news

From The Times OnLine
January 27, 2010
Crowds seeking aid in Haiti met with pepper spray and rubber bullets

United Nations troops used pepper spray yesterday to hold off a crowd of hungry Haitians queueing for food at a makeshift camp in the grounds of the wrecked presidential palace.

“They’re not violent, just desperate. They just want to eat,” Fernando Soares, a Brazilian army colonel, said. “The problem is, there is not enough food for everyone.”

The UN’s Brazilian troops are experienced — they have been stationed in Haiti for years — but they were struggling to hold the line. As they began deploying the pepper spray, the crowd broke up and ran back across the road coughing, eyes streaming.

Raoul Gai, 36, pulled his T-shirt over the head of Dalima, 9, his daughter, as she cried and spluttered. “They are giving food but I don’t like the way they are doing it,” he said.

Yesterday, the 14th day after the Haitian earthquake, the World Food Programme (WFP) was trying to deliver 107 cubic tonnes of rice and oil and beans to the starving of Port-au-Prince, enough to feed 20,000 people for 15 days. Two rice trucks were heading for the palace.

The queues had formed on the northern fringe of the ruins. As the food trucks came lumbering down the road, passing the city of shacks and tents, the whole camp stood up as one. Thousands of people came running out of their shelters and dashed across the road. “It’s not enough,” shouted a man as the convoy rattled past. “We are too many. Two trucks is not enough for us. They will fight, and the soldiers will shoot and fire gas.”

Recent attempts to deliver food to this camp have all descended into chaos: on Monday Uruguayan peacekeepers fired rubber bullets at the hungry masses, eventually withdrawing altogether, leaving the crowd to fight for the last sacks of rice.

The WFP trucks disappeared down an alley behind the palace, two tanks blocked the way and those at the front of the lines were given the bad news: only people on the south side of the palace would be served. So began a race around the ruins, young men streaming ahead, women and children behind, but for one sprightly woman in her sixties who managed to keep pace with the leaders. Her name was Elizabeth Sipion, 64. “My health is not so good,” she said. “I have eye problems, ear problems. But my belly is aching so I’m very fast.”

She secured a place near the front of one of the lines, but it was hard to tell which was the right line. Steel barricades ran across the alley. Behind them stood the Brazilian troops, followed by two tanks parked across the road. The trucks packed with rice were at the back of this procession.

The WFP says getting aid to the hungry in Port-au-Prince presents the greatest logistical challenge it has ever faced. Convoys have been caught for hours in traffic, there have been punctures. Once the trucks could not fit into the designated street.

“The UN staff have been working around the clock for the last 14 days,” said one WFP worker yesterday. “The only time they were not working was when they were looking for members of their family buried under rubble. They have lost their relatives, but they keep going.”

By Monday night the WFP said that it had delivered ten million meals to nearly 450,000 people. Villene Mariadine, 19, was one of the lucky recipients. Nine months pregnant, her house has been destroyed and her husband killed, and this was the first meal she had received. “I’m just so pleased to get it,” she said, walking away, a bag of rice balanced on her head.

Then the soldiers announced that the rice had run out. “There’s still food!” shouted a young man in the queue. “I can see it.”

“Go,” the soldiers said. “There is no more.” “But we are so hungry,” the crowd cried, thousands pressing behind. “We can’t stand it any more.”
Link

www.timesonline…

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January 26, 2010

Brazilian soldiers spray tear gas at crowd of Haitians rushing for food aid

Filed under news

Brazilian soldiers spray tear gas at crowd of Haitians rushing for food aid

By Peter Slevin and William Booth
Washington Post Staff Writers
Wednesday, January 27, 2010

PORT-AU-PRINCE, HAITI — Brazilian soldiers sprayed tear gas on a crush of Haitians seeking food from relief workers Tuesday, as international aid groups struggled to match the extraordinary demand for food two weeks after this country’s paralyzing earthquake.
This Story

For the second time in two days, hungry Haitians who were gathered outside the presidential palace saw food running out and rushed to grab bags of dried grains, causing the soldiers to use tear gas to hold them back, according to U.N. World Food Program officials. The officials called the incident “isolated” and “regrettable.”

Elsewhere in the capital, civilians backed by U.S. and U.N. troops successfully delivered food to thousands of people, but aid workers said more troops are needed for crowd control if Haitians are to be fed in the coming days.

As crowds swelled outside reopened banks and money transfer shops, the United Nations began recruiting Haitians for cleanup tasks, aiming to put money in workers’ pockets and inject money into the shattered economy.

Long after search and rescue efforts ended, U.S. soldiers pulled a 31-year-old man alive from a collapsed building on the Rue des Miracles. The man, dusty and wearing only underwear, had a broken leg and was severely dehydrated.

In Washington, State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said nearly 100 U.S. citizens were among the more than 110,000 people confirmed killed in the Jan. 12 earthquake. And at the Pentagon, officials said they expect the military can begin transferring its support role to others in three to six months.

Food, shelter and medical care remained the highest priorities in a capital hobbled by worry and logistical nightmares. The United Nations, which has only a small fraction of an estimated 200,000 family-size tents in the pipeline, appealed for enough food — preferably ready-to-eat meals — to feed 2 million people for 15 days.

“It’s fair to say that this is one of the most complex emergencies the World Food Program has had to respond to,” said Marcus Prior, a spokesman for the organization. He said that more supplies are on the way but that distribution remains difficult.
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Aid organizers said the principal shortage was not food or trucks, but security. They said more U.S. troops or U.N. peacekeepers are needed to organize crowds and keep them in line until the food is distributed.

Catholic Relief Services reported a second successful day of deliveries to tens of thousands of people camped on a golf course in Petionville, in the hills above Port-au-Prince, the capital. With soldiers from the 82nd Airborne Division helping Haitians to pass fat sacks of lentils and grains, workers reached 1,200 families after serving 1,300 on Monday.

Countless Haitians lost everything when their homes collapsed and have been unable to obtain cash as long as businesses have remained shuttered. With some of those businesses now reopening, large crowds started forming before dawn Tuesday outside banks and shops to withdraw cash or claim remittances from relatives abroad.

At a Unitransfer office on a main street in the Delmas neighborhood, 300 people had squeezed through the door by 1:30 p.m. At least as many remained outside as four members of the Haitian National Police controlled the flow of people.

Richardson Desir, 28, said he had stashed his savings in his home before the earthquake. When his home collapsed, he was left with only the money in his pockets, about $40. He buys a plate of rice and beans for about $3 on the street when he can, but his money is nearly gone.

Counting on receiving money promised by a cousin in Boston, he had started to wait outside the Unitransfer office starting at 8 a.m., but doubted he would make it inside before the shop closed at 4 p.m. He said he would try again Wednesday.

In the Montissaint neighborhood, the first “cash for work” crews organized by the U.N. Development Program began removing shovelfuls of debris from the canyon of crushed buildings that lined the block. The 5,000 new street cleaners will within a few weeks become a workforce of as many as 200,000, making the U.N. operation far and away the largest employer in the impoverished nation.

The crew — including old women in flip-flops and boys too young to shave — were desperate for the work, and they put their backs into the effort, pounding away on blocks of cement with hammers, crawling with pickaxes through snakes of downed power lines and tossing all the debris by hand into a row of waiting trucks.

The United Nations was paying them about $5 a day, with water. “This is the best thing for Haiti right now. It puts some food in our bellies, and we are doing something good for Haiti,” said Antoine Charles, a supervisor of a crew, who made an extra dollar a day. “Hey, hey,” he yelled at his workers, “keep shoveling!”

“There are no jobs in Haiti. This is a job,” said Adam Rogers of the Development Program. “It gives people something productive to do and it gives them some hope that tomorrow will be better.”

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Haiti’s Children Adrift in World of Chaos

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Haiti’s Children Adrift in World of Chaos
Ozier Muhammad/The New York Times

Published: January 26, 2010

CROIX DES BOUQUETS, Haiti — Not long after 14-year-old Daphne Joseph escaped her collapsed house on the day of the earthquake, she boarded a crowded jitney with her uncle and crawled in traffic toward the capital, where her single mother sold beauty products in the Tête Boeuf marketplace. “Mama,” she said she repeated to herself. “Mama, I’m coming.”

Abandoning the slow-moving jitney, Daphne, petite and delicate, got separated from her uncle and jumped onto a motorcycle-for-hire. She arrived alone at a marketplace in ruins and ran, in her dusty purple sandals, toward a pile of debris laced with “broken people,” she said.

Growing closer, she saw her mother, lifeless. She froze, she said, eventually watching as her mother’s body was dumped in a wheelbarrow and her only parent vanished into the chaos.

“I wanted to kill myself,” Daphne said in a whisper.

Haiti’s children, 45 percent of the population, are among the most disoriented and vulnerable of the survivors of the earthquake. By the many tens of thousands, they have lost their parents, their homes, their schools and their bearings. They have sustained head injuries and undergone amputations. They have slept on the street, foraged for food and suffered nightmares.

Two weeks after the earthquake, with the smell of death still fouling the air, children can be seen in every devastated corner resiliently kicking soccer balls, flying handmade kites, singing pop songs and ferreting out textbooks from the rubble of their schools. But as Haitian and international groups begin tending to the neediest among them, many children are clearly traumatized and at risk.

“There are health concerns, malnutrition concerns, psychosocial issues and, of course, we are concerned that unaccompanied children will be exploited by unscrupulous people who may wish to traffic them for adoption, for the sex trade or for domestic servitude,” said Kent Page, a spokesman for Unicef.

Many children, like Daphne, bore direct witness to horror or survived destruction that killed their relatives, their schoolmates and their teachers. But even those who did not are experiencing vertigo. When the ground shifted beneath them, the landscape of their universe changed forever, and not just at home: 90 percent of schools in the capital, Port-au-Prince, are damaged or destroyed, according to Unicef.

“The children of Haiti, unless they get help, they will have lost their childhoods, their innocence,” Elisabeth Delatour Préval, Haiti’s first lady, said Tuesday, pledging to get schools running as soon as possible, a daunting challenge.

Many children are struggling to make sense of what they are experiencing. Danielle Schledy, 13, who has been living with her family in the courtyard of a destroyed primary school in Port-au-Prince, said she kept telling her parents that the earthquake was “not the end of the world.”

Then, in her soiled turquoise dress and chipped pink nail polish, she skipped over to where her mother, Margarita Dayitus, who had bloody and infected wounds covering her body, lay in misery on the ground.

“I am sad about my mom,” Danielle said.

Poor, middle-class and affluent children are all destabilized, even those who get to spend nights indoors. Marie Alice Craft, a school psychologist, said her 11-year-old daughter had been sleeping with her — in a bed at a relative’s intact house — and waking up with a start when her mother got up to use the bathroom.

“She plays, she smiles, she laughs but she doesn’t want to be alone,” Ms. Craft said, adding that “a lot of group therapy” would be needed to make the children of Haiti feel safe again.

Child-welfare organizations have focused their initial efforts on orphaned children and those who have been separated from their families. They started Tuesday to compile a registry, sending workers into the streets to collect information for a database, in which each child would be assigned a numbered file to help track their cases, said Victor Nyland of Unicef, a senior adviser for child protection and emergencies. Such a registry was used in the Indonesian province of Aceh after the 2004 tsunami to help reunite separated families.

Some children who have nobody willing to look after them will be taken to one of three orphanages in the capital where Unicef is establishing interim care centers — that process began Monday with 60 children — or to safe spaces being established by other organizations.

In this city, Daphne was one of 25 newly orphaned children in the care of a local organization called Frades, a collective that does everything from providing microloans to serving hot meals.

“I know we can’t replace their parents,” said Pierre Joseph, a psychologist there. “It’s an intimate loss. But we will do our best to help these kids have a future. We will find a way to create an orphanage for them.”

Early this week, the children, ages 4 to 14, slept huddled together for warmth under bed sheets slung over branches in a tent city on the paved grounds of a damaged school. Young adults took turns looking after them. During the day, the counselors brought them to a walled construction site strewn with rusty cans and broken glass — the only private space they could find — and tried to distract them with singing and clapping games.

Daphne smiled occasionally as she watched the younger children, but mostly she looked stunned. When she told her story, she spoke so softly that she was barely audible. She explained that after she had watched her mother’s body being carted away, she wandered Port-au-Prince in a daze. A distant relative found her and put her in a taxi back to Croix des Bouquets, where she has nothing, she said.

“He told me to be tough,” she said, tears rolling down her cheeks.

She and her mother had lived with her uncle, but her uncle was shattered by his sister’s death — “They had to tie him up to calm him down,” Daphne said — and her uncle’s wife did not want her to stay with them. “She has always been mean to me,” Daphne said. “When I would get water, she’d tell me to use a coconut shell and not to dirty one of her glasses.”

Shortly after midday, the volunteers, who had been scraping together their own money to feed the children, gave them their first food of the day: sweet coffee and bread. Later, they fed them rice and beans. Then Mazen Haber, child protection officer with Save the Children, showed up with a large houselike tent and promised to find some mattresses, too.

Watching a dozen grown-ups struggle to erect the tent, Daphne said that adults had told her not to think about her mother. But she could still feel her presence, she said, “like a wind at my back.”

She said she was happy to be with the other children — the sisters with the wilted bows in their hairs, the tiny boys with the terror-stricken eyes — but she said she felt sorry that most had lost both parents.

“Before the earthquake, I only had but Mama,” she said.

Link www.nytimes.com…

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January 23, 2010

Anane - Anane’sWorld

Filed under records

Anane’s New Release Out February 16th, 2010 - Nervous/Vega Records

feat tracks: Plastic People, Love to Love You, & Shake It.

for more information on release, tour dates please visit

www.ananeselect…

www.ananesworld…

+ Anane performing at Deep-LA

SUNDAY JANUARY 31st DEEP - LA w LOUIE VEGA, ANANE, & MARQUES WYATT,
DEEP - LA Every Sunday Night
Deep is @ Vanguard 6021 Hollywood Blvd. Hollywood, CA
10:00PM - 4AM | 21+
For More Info www.deep-la.com

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January 15, 2010

Friday January 15th Seed Recordings presents Seed In The City

Filed under Events, featuredevents

Friday, January 15th, 2010

Seed Recordings presents Seed In The City Los Angeles’

We continue planting seeds this time round we welcome in the House Room Sole Channels very own Alix Alvarez!! along with residents Nef Nunez & Rudy V!! In the Hip Hop/Soul/Classics Room we got J-Logic & dj dAz!!!

DONT SLEEP PEOPLE!!! 2 ROOMS OF HEAT!! FOR THE PRICE OF ONE!!

with Resident NEF NUNEZ seed recordings, NYC

& very special guest Artist ALIX ALVAREZ solechannel - NYC

2nd  Room Ol’ Skool Hip Hop and Soul

DJ DAZ umoja - LA & J-LOGIC soundlessons - LA

18+ ID A MUST!!
Vibe begins @ 10pm till ?
LADIES FREE BEFORE 11PM!!
$10 BEFORE MIDNITE // $15 AFTER

Doors 10pm - 3am

Vertigo’s Night Club

801 Temple Street
Los Angeles CA (Downtown)
www.vertigos.com

For More Info Visit:

http://www.seedrecordings.org/upcoming-events.html

 

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