Re: Aardbeving in Haïti: 100.000 doden
Geplaatst: 25 jan 2010, 11:11
Bij ons vorige week. De dominee gaf aan: waarschijnlijk hebt u er niet op gerekend, maar dan kunt u uw gift overmaken op de rekening van de diaconie.
Beetje raar zo snel, maar je kunt er ook niet te lang mee wachten. Waarschijnlijk was gisteren of a.s.zondag het beste.vlinder schreef:Bij ons vorige week. De dominee gaf aan: waarschijnlijk hebt u er niet op gerekend, maar dan kunt u uw gift overmaken op de rekening van de diaconie.
opzich wel slim, vaak wordt er meer overgemaakt dan dat er in de collecte zak zou gestopt worden!vlinder schreef:Bij ons vorige week. De dominee gaf aan: waarschijnlijk hebt u er niet op gerekend, maar dan kunt u uw gift overmaken op de rekening van de diaconie.
Bij ons is het andersom...henriët schreef:opzich wel slim, vaak wordt er meer overgemaakt dan dat er in de collecte zak zou gestopt worden!
Gijs niet zeggen: beetje raar zo snel, maar: "Ik vind het een beetje raar zo snel". Dat komt minder arrogant over.Gijs83 schreef:Beetje raar zo snel, maar je kunt er ook niet te lang mee wachten. Waarschijnlijk was gisteren of a.s.zondag het beste.vlinder schreef:Bij ons vorige week. De dominee gaf aan: waarschijnlijk hebt u er niet op gerekend, maar dan kunt u uw gift overmaken op de rekening van de diaconie.
henriët schreef:opzich wel slim, vaak wordt er meer overgemaakt dan dat er in de collecte zak zou gestopt worden!
de orde was wel flink zoek met die halve anarchie en plunderingen...............refo schreef:http://www.brasschecktv.com/page/793.html
We need help, no soldiers. There's no war here!
Port-au-Prince, Haiti (CNN) -- A man pulled alive from the rubble of a building in Haiti's capital Monday may have been trapped since the January 12 quake that leveled much of the city, doctors reported.
The 28-year-old man, identified as Evan Muncie, was found in the wreckage of a market where he sold rice, his family told staff at a University of Miami field hospital. He suffered from extreme dehydration and malnutrition, but did not appear to have significant crushing injuries, the doctors said.
"He was emaciated. He hadn't had anything in quite some time. He had open wounds that were festering on both of his feet," said Dr. Mike Connelly, of the university's Project Medishare.
The people who brought him to the hospital said they found the man while digging out the marketplace, Connelly said.
iReporter Michael Andrew brought Muncie's story to light while working with the 82nd Canadian Naval unit.
The man told doctors that someone was bringing him water while he was trapped, but doctors told CNN that he sounded confused and at times appeared to believe he was still under the rubble. Connelly said the man must have had some water during the past month to have survived, but Connelly wasn't sure how he would have had access to it.
"Initially, I'm sure he had his senses with him, so maybe he was able to find some kind of resources," Connelly told CNN.
The discovery came nearly a month after the magnitude-7.0 earthquake that devastated Port-au-Prince on January 12. More than 200,000 deaths have been blamed on the quake.
Haiti's government declared search-and-rescue efforts over on January 23, but survivors still were being unearthed as late as January 27.
fijn!samanthi schreef:Onss adoptiekindje is ongedeerd
we zijn er heel gelukkig mee
gr samanthi