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THE SOLE OF AFRICA NEWSLETTER - MARCH 2007

John Paul DeJoria | Candice Hillebrand | The Floods


John Paul DeJoria

JOHN PAUL DE JORIA in Mozambique

JP made a trip to personally get involved with the Sole of Africa Landmine Victim Assistance program. JP was so taken by the work done by the Pretoria East Rotary group of South Africa, that he pledged to provide more limbs to the people in Mozambique

JP has "Put his Foot Down" and got involved - isn't it time you did ?

Maria and JP's full story can be found here

JP Mozambique DeJoria Mozambique
JP arrives at the clinic in Maputo,Mozambique
JP meets the landmine victims
JP Landmine Victims JP Sole of Africa
The story is told of how she lost both her legs
JP pledges to send more aid to the Sole of Africa
John Paul Mineseeker JP Maria
Maria and JP meet for the first time
Maria and JP after he has told her he would sponsor new legs

 

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Candice Hillebrand CANDICE HILLBEBRAND

Candice Hillebrand is one of our South African Ambassadors and we value her time spent on helping us to help Mozambique landmine victims to help themselves.

As stated by Candice: “At times it can seem overwhelming as there is so much suffering everywhere we turn, but on a personal level we can help with what we are aware of.

The fact that you are reading this means you are meant to do something however big or small it may be, you have a part in this now. Lets put our foot down, lets stand together, lets look back and not be ashamed we did nothing, lets be proud of who we are. If you had the chance to change just one life for the better would you?

If you believe that humanity can become better than we are, that we can evolve and have a higher destiny, let us begin today”.

Candice has had a busy period and has just finished filming a drama series for Fox MyNetwork called "American Heiress." It is going to start airing in the USA next month.  Candice spent some time in San Diego where the filming took place but is now back in LA.  Maxim online recently did a feature on Candice that will go into print shortly, and she took a short songwriting trip to Nashville where she
reports back that she "worked with some amazing people". One of the highlights of the last few months for Candice was a trip back to South Africa.

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Favio Victim 2007

CAIA, Mozambique, Feb 26 2007

Thousands of flood victims are pouring into crowded refugee camps in central Mozambique, straining relief efforts and prompting fears of a food crisis, authorities said on Monday.

Weeks of heavy rains have triggered flash floods along the mighty Zambezi river and its tributaries, washing away homes, bridges, livestock and crops in four central provinces in the low-lying southern African nation. Some 170,000 people have been displaced and at least 45 have died as a result of the flooding, the worst to hit the former Portuguese colony since the 2000-2001 floods that killed some 700 people and drove another half a million from their homes.

Aid workers were battling on Monday to supply food and fresh water to a ballooning refugee population, with an estimated 2,000 people each day streaming into temporary accommodation centers set up by the Red Cross and other agencies. "We still have some food, but it's not enough," said Joao Ribeiro, deputy director of Mozambique's National Institute for Disaster Management (INGC). Ribeiro said sanitary conditions in the shelters were worsening due to a lack of toilets and poor hygiene, raising fears of potential outbreaks of cholera and dysentery among the estimated 50,000 people living in the makeshift camps.

Mozambican President Armando Guebuza, however, said the relief effort was proceeding smoothly and there was no need for the government to issue a broad appeal for help."It's not a declaration on the international front that can help to change the situation. I think we are going in the right direction," Guebuza told reporters in Caia, a central Mozambican town that has become a command center for the relief effort.

Earlier on Monday the Mozambican leader flew over parts of the Zambezi valley that were hard hit by the flooding.
The U.N. World Food Programme (WFP) is already distributing food to refugees in the affected provinces. Neighbouring South Africa and the European Union also have pledged more help for the relief effort. South Africa will send two helicopters and a mobile water purification plant to its northeastern neighbour this week and could add a field hospital and water and wind resistant tents to its contribution, the SAPA news agency reported on Monday.

But aid workers say the effort to feed and shelter refugees has been complicated by poor roads in Mozambique, which is still rebuilding after a 16-year civil war that ended in 1991.The struggle to get food and water to flood victims could become more difficult in the coming weeks as more rain falls on the country. March traditionally is one of the wettest periods in Mozambique's rainy season.

"A lot of areas are still very difficult to get through and there are new pockets of disaster areas forming," said Peter Rodrigues, emergency relief coordinator for the WFP in Caia. "The challenge is that these people are spread out, making it difficult to reach them."

In southern Mozambique, which is home to the bulk of the country's economically important tourist resorts, authorities were assessing the damage from Cyclone Favio, which came ashore on Thursday with winds of up to 270 kph (169 mph). The cyclone slammed into the coast, knocking down buildings, uprooting trees and killing five people near Vilanculos. Mozambique's military on Monday was attempting to restore water and electricity in the resort city.

 
Mineseeker SA 2007