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BlackRain
01-04-2005, 06:09 PM
Americans Open Wallets for Tsunami Relief

By DAVID CRARY, AP National Writer

NEW YORK - From antibiotics to clothes to cash — lots of it — U.S.-based relief groups report an overwhelming response from donors moved by the devastation of the Indian Ocean tsunami, with more than $200 million raised as of Tuesday. One charity said online pledges were coming in at the rate of $100,000 an hour.

Donors contributing to what one official called a "tidal wave of generosity" ranged from actress Sandra Bullock, who gave $1 million, to 3-year-old Antonio Cabrera, who joined his brothers in dropping off cash-filled sandwich bags at the American Red Cross office in Denver.


Firm statistics for such relief campaigns are elusive. But charity officials said they expected donations to continue streaming in for weeks to come, putting the tsunami in the company of the Ethiopian famine of the mid-1980s and Central America's Hurricane Mitch of 1998 as the foreign disasters prompting the largest contributions from U.S. citizens.


The private donations are in addition to the $350 million pledged thus far by the U.S. government. Two ex-presidents renowned for their fund-raising prowess — Bill Clinton and George H.W. Bush — have been recruited to spur more private giving.


The No. 1 recipient, by far, has been the American Red Cross; its pledged tsunami donations as of Tuesday totaled $92 million.


"Something about this disaster has really touched a chord," said Suzanne McCormick, who heads the Red Cross chapter in southern Maine. "In terms of international relief, we have never seen anything on this scale."


Other major recipients included the U.S. Fund for UNICEF and Doctors Without Borders USA, with donations of about $20 million apiece; and World Vision, Oxfam America, Catholic Relief Services and Save the Children, each reporting gifts of roughly $15 million from U.S. sources.


Dozens of other agencies also were collecting funds for tsunami relief. A New Jersey council of mosques raised $250,000, the Akron, Pa.-based Mennonite Central Committee $2.5 million.


World Vision set a $50-million goal to help victims of the tsunami, the largest single commitment in its 54-year history.


"This disaster came on in an instant, but it will take years to help survivors rebuild their lives," said World Vision president Richard Stearns. "This tidal wave of generosity will help them rebuild."


Baltimore-based Catholic Relief Services has committed $25 million for relief efforts; spokeswoman Caroline Brennan said her colleagues were confident of raising that sum without dipping into reserves.


"We usually receive $40,000 a month through our Web site, and now we've been receiving $100,000 an hour," she said. "It's overwhelming. We're enormously grateful."


Doctors Without Borders USA, a branch of Medecins Sans Frontieres, has advised its supporters that it has raised enough to meet immediate needs related to the tsunami and urged donors to give to its other programs.


"We can't accept any more restricted donations at this time," said spokeswoman Kris Torgerson. "But we very much appreciate unrestricted donations to meet needs in Southeast Asia and elsewhere that are not in the immediate spotlight."


Numerous U.S. corporations have made large donations — including $10 million last week from Coca-Cola and $5 million Tuesday from Midland, Mich.-based Dow Chemical Co. The Connecticut-based relief group AmeriCares received $500,000 from The New York Stock Exchange Foundation.


Major drug companies such as Pfizer, Johnson & Johnson and Bristol-Myers Squibb have been giving not only cash but also antibiotics, bandages, pain relievers, syringes and other supplies.


Celebrities also are pitching in. Bullock gave $1 million to the Red Cross, while Leonardo DiCaprio, who filmed "The Beach" on a Thai island in the tsunami zone, set up a link on his Web site for relief donations. Singer Willie Nelson agreed to headline a benefit concert Sunday in Austin, Texas.


In Ohio, the majority owner of the Cincinnati Reds, Carl Linder, and his son, Carl Linder III, provided $200,000 for a flight carrying 60,000 pounds of antibiotics, food and water for tsunami victims in India and Sri Lanka.

In Fargo, N.D., which was hit by the Red River flood in 1997, city officials agreed to give $10,000 of taxpayer money to tsunami relief.

"As I think back to the flood. ... and the amount of assistance we received from so many people and communities, I feel compelled to reciprocate," Mayor Bruce Furness wrote in a letter to city commissioners.

In Chattanooga, Tenn., some errant motorists were given extra incentive to donate — Municipal Court Judge Russell Bean is letting them give $100 to tsunami relief rather than pay a traffic fine.

"I don't want to force this on them," Bean said. "But I thought this would be a good way for people to make a difference."

Argyll
01-04-2005, 06:27 PM
Along with the Monies coming in from Other countries,I sincerely hope that this gets distributed in accordance to the worst hit areas.

Though I know there's a problem with Sri Lanka because of the Tamil Tigers connection,where some of this money will no doubt get into their hands.

I'd like to know exactly how monies from Charitable donations gets distributed,who exactly recieves the fat cheques,how these fat cheques are then distributed to the regions,who ends up getting a slice of the "fat cheque" in the rebuilding of these disaster area's.
It's not like you can walk up to the Village Chief,hand him $30 million dollars and say......"Here you go sport,this is to rebuild your villlage".........it's just not that simple,who collects the interest if the monies remain in the hosts banks ,ie the USA,Aussies and the UK bank's?

There is going to be so much of this money wasted,and it may even be years before it actually get's distributed....in full!!

SHAM
01-04-2005, 06:37 PM
Thats a good start...i imagine it will grow alot bigger.
Its going to be almost impossible to track where all the money from around the world goes. Some of these effected countries arent the most open countries in the world..Somalia, Indonesia.

BlackRain
01-04-2005, 06:40 PM
Along with the Monies coming in from Other countries,I sincerely hope that this gets distributed in accordance to the worst hit areas.

Though I know there's a problem with Sri Lanka because of the Tamil Tigers connection,where some of this money will no doubt get into their hands.

I'd like to know exactly how monies from Charitable donations gets distributed,who exactly recieves the fat cheques,how these fat cheques are then distributed to the regions,who ends up getting a slice of the "fat cheque" in the rebuilding of these disaster area's.
It's not like you can walk up to the Village Chief,hand him $30 million dollars and say......"Here you go sport,this is to rebuild your villlage".........it's just not that simple,who collects the interest if the monies remain in the hosts banks ,ie the USA,Aussies and the UK bank's?

There is going to be so much of this money wasted,and it may even be years before it actually get's distributed....in full!!

I agree. Some of these relief organizations have outrageous overhead - they spend sometimes 50% of each dollar on administrative costs.

We have a big problem after the 9/11 attack where relief organizations did not actually give the money collected to the people who needed like the United Way. They were planning on keeping a big percentage of the total contributions for a rainy day.

Argyll
01-04-2005, 06:50 PM
It doesn't surprise me if a lot of these are scams,where they cream off the interest generated.........human nature at it's best and worst!!

budgie
01-04-2005, 10:25 PM
I think most countries - including and especially the US - have done an outstanding job. Really great response so far and I don't like people complaining it's not enough. The truth was the scale of the disaster took a few days to materialise. Fareed Zakaria has a good Op-Ed in the latest Newsweek.

Anyway Hi there Argyll. I'll be in Dubai from Feb 24 so maybe next time you're in the area we can have a pint.

limey
01-05-2005, 10:12 PM
Way to go !!!

The UK has pledged about $100,000,000 government aid, and around $160,000 in private donations. (beating our previous best of $140,000,000 in 1984 with band aid).

I also hear German F1 race car driver Michael Schumacher has donated $10,000,000 after his bodyguard died.

I wonder if Bill Gates has made a donation, (as he could buy most of the countries hit) !!!

:roll:

cut
01-05-2005, 11:31 PM
Way to go !!!

The UK has pledged about $100,000,000 government aid, and around $160,000 in private donations. (beating our previous best of $140,000,000 in 1984 with band aid).

I also hear German F1 race car driver Michael Schumacher has donated $10,000,000 after his bodyguard died.

I wonder if Bill Gates has made a donation, (as he could buy most of the countries hit) !!!

:roll:

the government has anounced that the donations is going to be upped to several hundred million over the next few days and I assume you mean private donations are at $160 million (even that is low considering we were at £60 million ($115 million) about 5 days ago)

Opening Batsman
01-05-2005, 11:43 PM
What is america's population?

Australia has privately donated $100,000,000 with a population of 20,000,000! :D

cut
01-06-2005, 12:06 AM
What is america's population?

Australia has privately donated $100,000,000 with a population of 20,000,000! :D

are those funny auzzie dollars or yankee ones?

Apogee
01-06-2005, 01:04 AM
Its prolly a good time to invest in South Asian construction companies, because they're gonna be busy with all of the destruction and money available for rebuilding.

Commie
01-06-2005, 08:56 AM
Sweden has donated approx 50 million American dollars with a population of 9 millions.

Not counting the goverment donations.

szr
01-06-2005, 10:55 AM
I wonder if Bill Gates has made a donation, (as he could buy most of the countries hit) !!!

:roll:
You do know that Bill Gates has his own charitable foundation (http://www.gatesfoundation.org/default.htm) which has given out billions since he started it in 2000, right?

cut
01-06-2005, 11:25 AM
I wonder if Bill Gates has made a donation, (as he could buy most of the countries hit) !!!

:roll:
You do know that Bill Gates has his own charitable foundation (http://www.gatesfoundation.org/default.htm) which has given out billions since he started it in 2000, right?

that doesn't mean he shouldn't donate extra for the biggest natural disaster known to man.

F1 driver Michael Schumacher has given $10 million, 1000 times what equally rich Bush has... ;)

szr
01-06-2005, 11:46 AM
F1 driver Michael Schumacher has given $10 million, 1000 times what equally rich Bush has... ;)

heh They're not even close to being equally rich. Bush has a net worth of between $9,634,088 and $26,593,000. Michael Schumacher made nearly twice that last year alone and has a net worth of over 750 mil. ;)

Umm-Qasr
01-06-2005, 12:10 PM
I just heard on CNN that Australia is going to/has donated the amount of 768 million dollars ... WOW. That's really setting an example ...

ibstolidude
01-06-2005, 12:21 PM
I wonder if Bill Gates has made a donation, (as he could buy most of the countries hit) !!!

:roll:
you should be a research analyst - & why roll your eyes? It isn't anyone elses fault you fail to follow the news of the organizations you critique.

The Bill and Melinda Gates foundation (a 27 billion endowment, in 2003 giving over 250 million to schools, ) had pledge several million in the first few days of the disaster. They are one of the driving private organization in aids awarness and im/vc in africa.

perhaps he is just less interested in the publicity?

SHAM
01-06-2005, 03:43 PM
I wonder if Bill Gates has made a donation, (as he could buy most of the countries hit) !!!

:roll:
you should be a research analyst - & why roll your eyes? It isn't anyone elses fault you fail to follow the news of the organizations you critique.

The Bill and Melinda Gates foundation (a 27 billion endowment, in 2003 giving over 250 million to schools, ) had pledge several million in the first few days of the disaster. They are one of the driving private organization in aids awarness and im/vc in africa.

perhaps he is just less interested in the publicity?


Must have no australian blood in him p-)

Haiw
01-06-2005, 06:00 PM
I wonder if Bill Gates has made a donation, (as he could buy most of the countries hit) !!!

:roll:
you should be a research analyst - & why roll your eyes? It isn't anyone elses fault you fail to follow the news of the organizations you critique.

The Bill and Melinda Gates foundation (a 27 billion endowment, in 2003 giving over 250 million to schools, ) had pledge several million in the first few days of the disaster. They are one of the driving private organization in aids awarness and im/vc in africa.

perhaps he is just less interested in the publicity?
True... if you're gonna whine about stingy rich people Bill Gates should be one of the last people on your list.

janush
01-06-2005, 09:52 PM
dutch at 112.000.000 in private donations........thats alot more per person. but we shouldnt make this a competition rofl

correction 182.000.000

Opening Batsman
01-06-2005, 09:55 PM
dutch at 112.000.000 in private donations........thats alot more per person. but we shouldnt make this a competition rofl
No we shouldn't, because nobody would stand up to the might of Australia and our loyalty buying in Indonesia. p-)

janush
01-06-2005, 10:06 PM
true true............

limey
01-07-2005, 08:04 PM
I wonder if Bill Gates has made a donation, (as he could buy most of the countries hit) !!!

:roll:
You do know that Bill Gates has his own charitable foundation (http://www.gatesfoundation.org/default.htm) which has given out billions since he started it in 2000, right?

I knew he did something for charity, but I had no idea what. Thanks for the link.





I wonder if Bill Gates has made a donation, (as he could buy most of the countries hit) !!!

:roll:
you should be a research analyst - & why roll your eyes? It isn't anyone elses fault you fail to follow the news of the organizations you critique.

The Bill and Melinda Gates foundation (a 27 billion endowment, in 2003 giving over 250 million to schools, ) had pledge several million in the first few days of the disaster. They are one of the driving private organization in aids awarness and im/vc in africa.

perhaps he is just less interested in the publicity?

Yeah - I would love a job where I didn't have to WORK for a living !!! So, how did you become a research analysist ? rofl

I rolled my eyes because Bills software is S**T. If anyone deserves to give charity back to the people - it's him. For example - I was tired of re-installing my previous incarnations of Windows, so I bought and installed Windows XP, only to find I couldn't upgrade my PC thanks to his registration crap. (but I digress into O/T). Next time - I buy Linux !!!

Kilgor
01-07-2005, 08:55 PM
I rolled my eyes because Bills software is S**T. If anyone deserves to give charity back to the people - it's him. For example - I was tired of re-installing my previous incarnations of Windows, so I bought and installed Windows XP, only to find I couldn't upgrade my PC thanks to his registration crap. (but I digress into O/T). Next time - I buy Linux !!!

Bills software is ****, because its gotta be compatable with thousands of different hardware/software platforms, some dating back 10 years. And have to run games and yet stable server based apps at the same time.

But yeah, if you dont wannta run games.. run knoppix !

limey
01-07-2005, 09:01 PM
I rolled my eyes because Bills software is S**T. If anyone deserves to give charity back to the people - it's him. For example - I was tired of re-installing my previous incarnations of Windows, so I bought and installed Windows XP, only to find I couldn't upgrade my PC thanks to his registration crap. (but I digress into O/T). Next time - I buy Linux !!!

Bills software is ****, because its gotta be compatable with thousands of different hardware/software platforms, some dating back 10 years. And have to run games and yet stable server based apps at the same time.

But yeah, if you dont wannta run games.. run knoppix !

It's worth a try on my new PC, I only have Win 98 to lose. :lol:

THANX