Saturday, December 31, 2005

A Lucky Boy In Central Vietnam

This report came in a couple weeks ago from our office in Central Vietnam:

boy1205 copy.jpgAn accident happened to an eight-year-old boy (Nguyen Chi Luong-born in 1997) in Phu Loc district of Thua Thien Hue province on the ending days of the year 2005. It was on Dec 13^th when the boy came home from school. He saw unknown ordnance on the way and picked it up (It was reported later that it is a fuse). Because of curiosity, he tried to tamper it. And then came the explosion at 5 p.m. The boy received a lot of fragments on the chest and two arms and lost 2 fingers in the left hand.

Luckily, no other kids were involved the that accident. The boy was then taken to the local health center and first aid and thereafter transferred to Hue Central Hospital for intensive care and treatment. He had two surgeries for skin transplant already.

CPI Blog Functionality Restored

Thanks to Lisa from MovableType, as of 10:30 on New Year's Eve, the CPI Blog is functioning again. For that matter, so is the rest of the site. This site is largely run on MovableType thanks to the brilliant design ideas of Scott Harden and Jason Brush formerly of Subvergent.

I had applied an update to the MovableType Software back in September and somehow I screwed up the installation. To make a long boring story short... I finally (again thanks to Lisa) got everything back in order today.

Hopefully there are still some people out there getting our feed.... and if you are, thanks for your patience... and pass it around will ya??

CPI Raises Substantial Funding in 4th Quarter

Good news in our most recent press release:

During the fourth quarter of 2005, Clear Path International raised more than $275,000 for landmine accident survivors in Southeast Asia through major grants, special events and grassroots contributions, the organization said this week.

In October, Clear Path�s fifth anniversary benefit dinner at the Columbia Tower Club in Seattle, attended by many of its island supporters, raised nearly $30,000. This included a $5,000 underwriting grant from the Seattle-based law firm Marler Clark, LLC.

In December, the humanitarian mine action group received word from the McKnight Foundation in Minneapolis of $180,000 in grants for Clear Path�s survivor assistance projects in Vietnam and Cambodia during the next two years.

The largest two-year grant from McKnight, for $105,000, will support a joint project of CPI and Cambodian Volunteers for Community Development in Phnom Penh to build a rice mill in Battambang Province, western Cambodia.

The proposed rice mill and adjoining facility in Battambang will accommodate the training of landmine accident survivors and their families in hands-on agricultural and technical vocational skills.
The total budget for the mill, whose production is expected to make the training program self-sustaining within three years, is $327,000.

The other two-year McKnight grant for $75,000 will support Clear Path International�s survivor assistance program in central Vietnam, where the organization provides medical and socioeconomic assistance to hundreds of families in three districts north and south of the former Demilitarized Zone that once split the country in two.

From the Mark D. Johnson Charitable Trust in California, Clear Path received a $50,000 gift, with $30,000 for survivor assistance in all three program countries �� Vietnam, Cambodia and the Thai-Burma border area �� and $20,000 for a media project to raise awareness of the landmine problem in Southeast Asia.

In addition, Clear Path received a $5,000 grant for its survivor assistance and mine action work from the Olive Higgins Prouty Foundation and $4,000 from John and Hazel Griffith of San Jose. The remainder of the $275,000 came from individual donations.

Since it was founded on Bainbridge Island in 2000, Clear Path has provided assistance to more than 2,300 landmine accident survivors and their families in Southeast Asia, and sent 60 containers with $4 million worth of medical equipment and supplies to dozens of hospitals in 20 countries affected by the presence of landmines.

Thursday, December 29, 2005

Movie About Arn Chorn-Pond Now on Netflix

The Flute Player, the beautiful, Emmy nominated film by Jocelyn Glatzer about our good friend and Advisory Board member, Arn Chorn-Pond is now available on Neflix! This is GREAT news as this film was previously hard to get.

About the film: After the Khmer Rouge took over Cambodia in 1975, 9-year-old Arn Chorn-Pond was thrust into the darkness of Cambodia's Killing Fields. For four years, Arn's musical talent kept him from perishing in a genocide that took the lives of 2 million Cambodians. Now, after living in the United States for 20 years, Arn faces the dark shadows of his war-torn past as he fights to save Cambodia's once-outlawed traditional music from extinction.

Follow this link to get the film from Netflix!



Sunday, December 4, 2005

CPI Supporter Bikes Across Vietnam

van lai.jpgClear Path International supporter, Van Lai will be cycling from Saigon to Hanoi with an organization called Symbiosis Expeditions, to raise awareness and money for Clear Path International.

Her trip will take her through the villages and outskirts of Vietnam, and will include a visit to Clear Path�s facilities, totaling 1,700 kilometers in 20 days.

This trip is dedicated to her mother and father, and her late uncle, Le Thuc Anh who was killed by a land mine during the Vietnam war.

Van Lai was born in Saigon and left the country with her family at the end of the Vietnam War in 1975. She was 2 years old at the time. This will be her first trip back, and she wants to use this trip as an opportunity to help people in Vietnam still suffering from the effects of the war.

Van earned a degree in Psychology from the University of Santa Barbara in 1995 and her MBA from Pepperdine University in 2000. She currently lives in Los Angeles CA and is a business consultant for small businesses and entrepreneurs.

Please go to www.cpi.org/vansride to contribute to Clear Path on her behalf.


Thursday, October 13, 2005

Sally Taylor & John Curley to Host CPI�s 5th Anniversary on Oct. 16

SEATTLE -- Clear Path International will celebrate its fifth anniversary at 5:30 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 16 with a benefit dinner high above Seattle at the Columbia Tower Club.

The event, �An Evening of Hope for Landmine Survivors,� will be hosted by KING 5 Evening Magazine�s John Curley and feature Singer-songwriter Sally Taylor (daughter of James Taylor and Carly Simon) (www.sallytaylor.com).

Taylor, along with her music career, is also a force in the field of humanitarian mine action. Together with her husband, Dean Bragonier, she started the tranquility project, raising money and awareness to combat the global landmine problem (www.tranquilityproject.org).

Besides Taylor�s unique blend of folk and country, and MC John Curley�s lively and engaging personality, the evening will include a live and silent auction with getaways to Provence, the Caribbean, Whistler, Sun Valley; signed Pink Floyd album cover art and other rock 'n roll collectibles.

The evening will mark the first five years since Clear Path International began its work assisting landmine accident survivors.

In that time, Clear Path has provided everything from prostheses to vocational skills training to more than 2,000 mine and bomb victims in Southeast Asia. And, it has sent 50 containers with $3.5 million worth of medical equipment and supplies to hospitals in 20 mine-affected countries.

Looking ahead to the next five years, CPI foresees an ongoing, and in some cases increasing, need for our medical and social services to innocent victims of landmine explosions.

Because of growth and development in Vietnam�s war-torn central provinces, for instance, accidental explosions happen several times a week, sometimes every day now, and often involve children (www.cpi.org).

Proceeds from the benefit will be used to support Clear Path�s humanitarian work in Vietnam, Cambodia and along the Thai-Burma border. Individual tickets are $75. Couples and corporate packages are also available.

For registration and details: Call CPI�s West Coast office at 206-780-5964 or write to Imbert Matthee: Imbert@cpi.org



Wednesday, September 14, 2005

CPI Supporter Writes song for Louisiana

Those that have been to recent Clear Path events on the east coast will be familiar with Rick Redington. Rick has written a song for Louisiana hurricane victims in the hopes that it will inspire people to give to the relief effort.

The song can be found here.

Nice job, Rick!


Thursday, September 1, 2005

The World's Heaviest Landmine Survivor




Meet Motola... landmine survivor and recent recipient of an artificial limb. Read more here


Tuesday, August 30, 2005

Nghia's Making a Steady Recovery!

Toan posts this story from the field about the progress of our young friend, Nghia. You can read more about Nghia here.

One day in August 2005, I received a phone call from the Medical Liaison in Hue informed that Nghia wanted to have prosthetics legs. We CPI staff were very happy with this good news�

I came to visit Nghia on a weekend day August 27^th at his house in Hue. Seeing him sitting on the wheelchair outside the house, he looked so relaxed with a smile on his face when he saw me. He looked great and a bit fatter compared to 3 months ago. As a new school year is coming, I brought him a box with CPI logo, in which there are several stuff like pen, eraser, etc and asked him if he was ready to get back. He seemed very excited in answering me: �Yes, I want to go back to school this year. I have missed my classmates and teachers a lot but I have to delay this for some time�. He then smiled at Son, the Medical Liaison, with a shy look �I went to Hue Central Hospital on August 24^th for checking if I can wear prosthetic legs. It is good that the doctor said yes. And I have my legs measured already. I may have it in 10 days. I then need to stay in the hospital for a month to practise. I am longing for that from now�.

I could see his eyes twinked with the light of happiness. In fact, he had changed a lot in his spirit. From being upset and depressed after in uxo accident in March, the smile is now quite often in his face. His voice is also now more clearer and stronger. He told me that he really wanted to use the prosthetics which would help him walk a bit at first. Even though it is not real legs, he could be more confident in standing on his own legs instead of the wheelchair.

Sunday, August 28, 2005

Recent Accidents

Hi Chi and the Vietnam CPI Staff,

I am so sad to read about these last two accidents. I send my support to you guys because I know it is very difficult to see death and destruction every week. I can't even imagine having to see the devastation time after time.

I go there only about once a year and it takes me a while to recover from the reality of innocent farmers, children, and scrap metal collectors maimed and killed. I've been back here around three weeks and I am still thinking about Nghia (the 13 year-old boy who lost both feet and one hand in March) every day. It is haunting me. And his is only one case out of so many.

Sending support from here...

Always,

Joan


Wednesday, August 24, 2005

August 25: One man killed, house down to ashes


The phone rang just as we enter the office after lunch break. Another UXO accident had just happened in Vinh Lam commune, Vinh Linh district. The informant just briefed that it was a serious accident involved a man killed and the house was completely burned down.

The house is located at the end of Tien Lai village; and as we were walking to it, we saw our neighbor, Cliff Allen, the Technical Field Manager of MAG, was walking in the opposite direction. His hands were holding two UXOs. Behind him was another MAG�s deminer carrying more UXOs. They found these within the family�s property.

The scene looked devastating. The house, or it should be more correctly to say what ever remain of the house, were still burning as we stepped in. Smoke was coming up from everywhere. The house had completely burned down to ashes, included furniture, clothes and a motorcycle. Some men were spraying water from a tiny water hose onto burning things to put out the fire; most of the villagers were standing out as more UXOs were suspected to be present. Several MAG�s deminers were checking the back yard of the house with their metal detectors. Three men were wandering along the bamboo fence, searching for any remains of the poor man.


The victim was Truong Quang Quyet, a 52 years old man. The accident happened at 10:15 when he was tampering a large caliber UXO in a corner in the back of the house. At 10 o�clock, Quyet�s wife was watching TV with her daughter when Quyet got home on his motor bike. He propped the bike and went directly to the kitchen. Fifteen minutes later the wife told her daughter to set the table for lunch and just as the girl entered the kitchen, a loud explosion occurred from the back corner of the house. The explosion knocked down the house and set everything on fire. The wife, after gathered her wits, ran out and screamed out loud for help.
The first men arrived at the site rushed into the flaming home and pulled out the panicked girl (luckily, she was unhurt), and looked for the father. They did not find him in the flame. The powerful blast had thrown him out in a red dirt path outside the house, about 20m from the detonation point.
According to the chairman of Vinh Lam commune, this is the worse accident happened in the area for the last 15 years that includes lost of live and property.

Tuesday, August 23, 2005

Father of Five Killed by Bomb in Vietnam


Sounds of lament could be heard from a distance. Neighbors were quietly preparing for the funeral. An altar was set up right at the main entrance to the living room. A green curtain separates the altar from a bed in which laid the body of Nguyen Duy Khanh covered under a rush mat. On one side of the bed laid Khanh�s two sons facing down on the cement floor. They�d been shocked and exhausted for crying too much. On the other side of the bed were the rest of the family members: sisters, mother and daughters, all were grieving.

The accident happened at 5p.m on the previous day, August 23rd, 2005. Khanh and one of his sons, Nguyen Van Chung were hoeing land in an area about 3 kms east from Nhi Thuong village. It is a sandy hill by the coast of Gio Linh known as �hill 31� to locals. The hill once served as the starting point of the McNamara�s line, a defensive system established along the southern edge of the DMZ. Chung was about ten meters away from his father when he heard an explosion. He turned around and saw his father was down on the ground. He rushed up and realized that the father was in serious condition: he lost his left hand, broke his right arm and the right thigh was broken off. Khanh was bleeding hard and this scares the young boy. He ran out to look for help and returned with four more men. The injured was taken to commune aid station and then forwarded to district hospital but Khanh couldn�t make it. He died on the way.
Khanh is 52 years old and is father of 5 dependent children. His first daughter is a college student while the youngest child is still in the 6th grade.

Monday, August 22, 2005

US-Vietnam War Continues to Claim Lives, Limbs In Central Vietnam

QUANG TRI, Vietnam - August 22 - The US-Vietnam War continues to claim lives and limbs here in Central Vietnam. Bombs that lie scattered across the landscape detonate on a regular basis killing and maiming adults and children on a regular basis.

51 year old Tran Ca was clearing weeds last week near an ancestral tomb in Quang Tri Province, Vietnam when his hoe hit a piece of unknown ordnance. The piece exploded and he died from his injuries in the hospital an hour later. His son in law, Ky was slightly injured in the accident.

Also last week, 17 year old Tran Dinh Quan lost an eye and a hand when a piece of ordnance he discovered exploded and nearly killed him. He was removing brush from a bomb crater near his home to raise fish for his family. Bomb craters are commonplace in this part of Vietnam which still feels the effects of a war that ended long ago.

Although the Vietnam War ended 30 years ago, by some estimates over 350,000 tons of bombs that did not detonate when dropped remain in the ground. This ordnance regularly claims lives and limbs in this still war-ravaged province. Since the conflict ended in 1975, nearly 40,000 Vietnamese have been killed by by these munitions.

Clear Path International serves landmine and bomb accident survivors, their families and their communities in former war zones in Southeast Asia. This assistance takes the form of both direct and indirect medical and social services to survivor families as well as equipment support to hospitals. Current Clear Path projects are in Vietnam, Cambodia and on the Thai-Burma border.


Thursday, August 18, 2005

BOY LOST HAND AND EYE IN WAR-ERA UXO ACCIDENT


The explosion badly injured Quan. He lost the left hand, left eye and two fingers in the right hand. In addition, he was seriously injured in his chest and two legs. After the accident, he was taken to Quang Tri General Hospital for first aid and intensive treatment.

Tran Dinh Quan had just finished his study at grade 11 nearly three months ago and will be in the last grade at High school next school year. During his summer holidays, he stayed at home and often helped his parents with housework and farming. August 9th 2005 was a free day to Quan as he decided to excavate a bomb crater in his garden to make it become a pond for raising fish.

No one else in the family could help Quan on that day because they were all occupied with other farm jobs. Therefore, Quan had to start his work very early in the morning to avoid the sunshine. Rain and sun had made soil in the bomb crater so soft and loose that was much easy for Quan�s work. Everything went through quite smoothly in the morning even though he had finished a small part of the work. A short nap after lunchtime had filled Quan with more energy. Quan thus felt very excited to continue his work. As he dug slowly in the middle of the bomb crater, he found a bullet. He then stopped digging and got into the house. He was a bit curious to know what the bullet was, whether it had exploded or not. He then dropped in into the floor and stepped away to turn on the TV. It suddenly detonated. It was at 14h at that time. Luckily, no one else except Quan was at home to be injured.
Quan is the third child in the family of 7 members. His parents are farmers. His eldest brother, who is now 23 years old, had to stop school to attend a vocational training for learning a job to help his old parents. The next child is also a son who completed High school already and was unemployed at the moment. The two youngest, one aged 14, learning at the 9th grade and one was born in 2001, still very small.
When CPI staff came to respond to the accident and met Quan�s family members in Quang tri General Hospital, they seemed to be panic and felt very wretched. They could not believe what had happened to Quan, who was lying in the hospital bed in very bad condition because of the severe injury.

A Destructive Blast Occured in Central Viet Nam



The place looked as if there was a strong typhoon had just gone through: trees with torn up leaves; broken bricks, roof tiles scattered around as two third of the house was demolished. There was not even enough space inside the house for the coffin. Thus it was put in the front yard, sheltered by cheap plastic tarpaulin. Next to it sat two thin and small kids, one boy and one girl, and a woman. All three of them wore funeral�s white bands on their heads. They sat quietly on the wet ground under the tiny temporary shelter, staring out in the rain.

There was a group of locals gathered around a young lady in the front yard, donating their small bank notes for the funeral ceremony of the passed away guy and for medical treatments for the injured guy. The scene was quiet and devastated looking.

The accident happened at 17:30 hours on August 10th, 2005. There were all together 4 people at or near the scene. However, nobody really knew what exactly Nguyen Ngoc was doing as he was alone in a corner out side the house. His younger half brother, Tran Lai was inside the house and Ngoc�s two children were pilling fire woods in the front yard. One common thing that was confirmed by all locals that the explosion was very loud; and, just by a quick glance, everything within a radius of 5 meters was all destroyed.



Ngoc was killed right on the spot. The blast took him really hard as Ngoc had completely lost the lower half of his body from the waist down, included his two hands. Lai, at the time was separated from the blast by the house�s wall, also received a tiny frag in his head. The two children received minor cuts on their faces and back from broken pieces of roof tiles and bricks that felt on them.
The seat of the explosion was a small hole about 25cms in diameter and 15cms deep. According to MAGs technicians, it was possibly a 76mm projectile that went off on or near the surface while standing on end. A motorbike lay close to the remains of the building also had sustained damages.
After the accident, Lai was taken to local health center for first aid and transferred to Quang Tri General Hospital in the following morning for intensive treatment.

Congratulations Imbert - 50 Medical Shipments!

Congratulations Imbert, for accomplishing 50 medical equipment shipments to war ravaged countries! It is a wonderful program because American hospitals purchase new equipment when the old equipment is sill in perfect condition. Instead of wasting perfectly good beds or X-Ray equipment or a CAT scan machine, Imbert sends them to medical staff who desperately need them. Sometimes there is overstock of new supplies which he can send.


When our group was in Danang last month Dr. Than proudly took us to a room to show us the beautiful new scanning aparatus that he received in a shipment; he said he uses it all the time and it is really useful in his practice. The Danang Orthopedic and Rehabilitaiton Center treats 1,000 uxo victims per year, 100 new uxo victims.
It is heartbreaking to meet with highly competent doctors who tell us about losing patients or not being able to help someone because they lack the tools. Imbert's tenacity for pursuing the shipment program is very impressive. He has found generous donors for containers. In this program everyone wins.
Thanks, Imbert!

Sunday, August 14, 2005

Foot Doctor Helps Poor

Our good friend and CPI advisor Dr. Frank Cobarrubia is profiled this week in the THE BULLETIN out of Bend, Oregon.

Dr Frank is one of those remarkable people you feel fortunate to know. He has given so much of his time to help others that you wonder if he ever has time for himself.

>Please read more about Dr. Frank here.

Thursday, August 11, 2005

One Killed, Two Injured by US-Vietnam War Era Bombs

One Killed, Two Injured by US-Vietnam War Era Bombs

Quang Tri Province, Vietnam- One man was killed and two other men remain hospitalized after encountering US-Vietnam War era ordnance this week in central Vietnam

On August 10th, 32 year old Nguyn Ngoc was working outside his home with his brother Lai when when a decades old rocket exploded killing Ngoc on the spot. Lai received head injuries and is currently in the hospital. The victim's family home was demolished in the blast.

In a separate incident on the same day, Nguyen Van Canh, 40, was hoeing in his garden when he struck an unknown piece of ordnance and it exploded. He received major injuries to his intestines, lost two fingers and sustained major shrapnel wounds in his legs. At this writing he remains in intensive care.

Although the Vietnam War ended 30 years ago, by some estimates over 350,000 tons of bombs that did not detonate when dropped remain in the ground. This ordnance regularly claims lives and limbs in this still war-ravaged province. Since the conflict ended in 1975, nearly 40,000 Vietnamese have been killed by by these munitions.

Clear Path International serves landmine and bomb accident survivors, their families and their communities in former war zones in Southeast Asia. This assistance takes the form of both direct and indirect medical and social services to survivor families as well as equipment support to hospitals. Current Clear Path projects are in Vietnam, Cambodia and on the Thai-Burma border.

More information about Clear Path International can be found on the web at www.cpi.org.

Tuesday, August 9, 2005

Cruel Summer: Bombs of Vietnam War Continue to Kill and Maim

Cluster bombs and other ordnance left over from the Vietnam War continue to kill and maim civilians in Vietnam 30 years after the war ended here.

Below is a brief on just some of the accidents that occured in Central Vietnam for the month of July 2005:

July 6th a man in Quang Binh Province disturbed a piece of unknown ordnance while farming and sustained major injuries to his chest and legs, broke both his collarbones, suffered severe burns on his face and lost three fingers on his left hand.

On July 8 in Quang Tri Province, 14 year old Duong Ba Tien was found dead on his parent's farm after he apparently disturbed an unexploded bomb while harvesting crops.

On July 9th, 28 year old Phan Van Huong lost sight in one eye and partially in the other after a sub-surface piece of ordnance detonated while he was weeding in his garden.

On July 12th A 22-year old man sustained serious unjuries to his chest, face and arms when a cluster bomb detonated while he was clearing bushes.

On July 15th an 8 year old boy received minor inuries to his eyes when a piece of ordnance exploded in brush burning outside his home

On July 19th in Ha Tinh province a 14 year old boy lost his left hand and injured his left leg after finding a piece of ordnace near his home.

Also On July 19th in Quang Binh Province, Le Cuong, a 37 year old man was killed while farming after he accidentally detonated an unknown piece of ordnance now thought to be a cluster bomb.

On July 22nd 41 year old Nguyen Cuu Lam was killed while scavenging metal in Quang Tri Province.

On July 29th 17 year old Pham Van Kien sustained major abdominal injuries when he and his friends discovered a piece of ordnance near their home.

Although the Vietnam War ended 30 years ago, by some estimates over 350,000 tons of bombs that did not detonate when dropped remain in the ground. This ordnance regularly claims lives and limbs in this still war-ravaged province. Since the conflict ended in 1975, nearly 40,000 Vietnamese have been killed by by these munitions.

Clear Path International serves landmine and bomb accident survivors, their families and their communities in former war zones in Southeast Asia. This assistance takes the form of both direct and indirect medical and social services to survivor families as well as equipment support to hospitals. Current Clear Path projects are in Vietnam, Cambodia and on the Thai-Burma border.

More information about Clear Path International can be found on the web at www.cpi.org.

Saturday, August 6, 2005

HRW: Destroy Stockpile of Unsafe Cluster Submunitions

While we call ourselves a "Landmine Victim Assistance" organization, it is really accurate, but much more wordy to say "Victim of Unexploded Ordnance Assistace" organization.

Bombies, or cluster bombs, kill and injure more people in Vietnam than landmines. The cluster bomb is the landmine's more deadly, and less famous cousin.

I missed this story last week about cluster bombs so here it is from the

Human Rights Watch:

U.S.: Destroy Stockpile of Unsafe Cluster Submunitions

(Washington, D.C., July 21, 2005) - Despite some positive developments in its cluster munition policy, the United States retains-and still is willing to use-at least 728 million old, unreliable and inaccurate cluster submunitions, Human Rights Watch said today in a briefing paper. "The Pentagon should destroy its stockpile of dangerous and outdated cluster submunitions," said Bonnie Docherty, researcher in Human Rights Watch's Arms Division. "These submunitions pose great risks to civilian populations and should never be used."

Please read the rest of this article here.


Journal of Mine Action Article on Clear Path

An article written by CPI Co-founder Imbert Matthee is appearing in this month's online version of the Journal of Mine Action.

Survivor Assistance Profile: Clear Path International

Rebuilding Shattered Lives in Southeast Asia


You can read the article here.


Imbert, far left (in more ways than one, really) interviews a landmine survivor in Cambodia.



Thursday, August 4, 2005

A Day in the Life of CPI's Duc and Chi


Chi and Duc work in our office in Vietnam and work with beneficiaries in their homes. We call these visits "field trips" and sometimes the travel can be quite far. Chi has filed this report.

After one and a half weeks of being tied up with important office work, by Friday afternoon, our field trip plan was filled up with due activities that can�t be delayed any further: We got reports of six new accidents came in and one House Hold Grant need to implement in 7 different communes of three provinces of Ha Tinh, Quang Binh and Quang Tri. This would usually mean a lot of mileage to travel.

Thus, our first thing on Monday morning of August 2nd, 2005 was getting the preparation work done for a two-day field trip: Phone calls to working partners and families were made; obtain all necessary forms related; check/charge camera�s batteries and top up our truck, a 4x4WD Nissan Patrol.

sunrise.jpgI got up at 4:30 am on Tuesday morning, and Duc arrived at 4:50 to pick me up. The air in the early morning was so fresh and clear. The photo you see is of the sunrise.
We joined the traffic on highway 1, heading north. Our first destination of the day is Ky Anh district of Ha Tinh province, which is 200km away. Highway 1 is in good condition, however, we usually name it as the �low speed-highway� since the speed limits are very low (maximum 35km/hour when in town and 60km/hour when out town). If you exceed more than 20% of the limits then you would end up with a 1,500,000VND fine (equal US$ 100.00) and a hole is punched into your driving license (When you get three holes in the license, you are not a driver of some sort anymore for you have to go back to driving school and start learning from the beginning)� Anyway, we got to the first destination after almost 4 hours drive, passed by several speed-control points on the way without any trouble.
Case # 1: Vo Dinh Thao; born: 1991. Accident Date: July 18, 2005. Injury: Lost left hand, Knee injured.

With good and quick coordination from the district and commune officials, we parked out truck in a shade and followed the commune guide to the first home in Tan Thang village, Ky Tan commune when the clock showed 09:05. The first impression we got was the sound of a Vietnamese pop music song playing loudly from a tiny dirt house. Photo: Vo Dinh Thao 02. Luckily, the boy was at home, alone, listening to the music came out from a VCD (the only valuable asset in the house). His name is Vo Dinh Thao, born in 1991. He stood up to receive us and the white bandage on his left stump caught our eyes. The accident happened to him at 15:00 on July 18, 2005 when he was out in the field getting fresh grass to feed the family�s cow. While he was digging up the grass, his hoe blade hit something subsurface, which immediately responded in a loud explosion. The powerful blast cut off three fingers on his left hand and badly crushed the other fingers. Fragment also penetrated into his left knee. Locals nearby heard the explosion rushed out and immediately took him to the commune aid station and then forwarded him to the district hospital in the same afternoon. After 12 days of treatment, Thao was released from the hospital on July 29, 2005. The doctors had already removed all the fragments in his knee; however, they had also amputated his hand by the wrist joint. Thao said that he doesn�t feel hurt anymore at the wounds, but it would take him more time for the knee skin to heal before he can fold his knee.
While we were talking, Thao mother, Nguyen Thi Minh, came home. She is a short, middle aged woman. Look at her face, one can tell that she is not in good health and had been through a difficult life. With the participation of the mother, the family story is revealed clearer. Mrs. Minh has been living with her two sons and Thao is the youngest. A work accident happened to her in 1979 when she was a worker at a rock quarry. She and other workers stood at the bottom of the quarry, manually exploit and move small rocks when a large rock from up above suddenly felt down on her. Minh�s small body was all buried under it. She was rescued and transported to the hospital. The woman survived from the accident with a long scar on her head behind the ear, the left thigh bone and toe bone were broken. She was entitled for an early retirement with a monthly compensation of 300,000VND (equivalent to US$ 20.00). Since then, she was unable to do anything other than some light house work. There has been no presence of a father in the small family. The mother had struggled a lot to raise her two sons. Two months ago, her first son (Thao�s older brother) returned home after two years away in the south for a living. He gave his mother 5 million VND (US$ 320.00) asked her to buy a cow and took the rest of his saving down town and brought home a set of VCD and speakers. After the family reunion, life resumed its usual pace. Daily, the two brothers took turn to take care of the cow and some farm work while the mother would cook meals and raise three small piglets at home. Mrs. Minh said that she goes to the market every other day and would spend all together about 10,000VND (US$ 0.6) for food for the three of them. (Apparently, her monthly compensation of 300,000VND is the only stable income for the family). On the day of the accident, she had 250,000VND, still not enough for emergency treatment. Thus she had to apply for an emergency loan of 1 million VND with an interest rate of 1.5%/month. The total medical costs were almost US$ 100.00.
After reimburse the medical cost for the family, we said goodbye to the family and walked back to the truck, still, our thoughts were with the family and their living circumstance.
Case # 2: Duong Van Sy; Born: 1976. Accident Date: Jan 18, 2005. Injury: Died on the way to hospital.

Our next destination was Ky Lam commune. We arrived at the commune�s people committee at 10:45. With a previous introduction phone call from our district partner, the commune leaders and police received us at their office with a brief on UXO accidents in the area. Until then, we realized that there had been two UXO related accidents happened here in 2005. One back in January, the second was just three days ago, on July 29th. We decided to visit both families.
The commune policeman first took us to the home of Duong Van Sy�s parent-in-law. We met Sy�s wife with her two small sons and Sy�s mother-in-law, who slowly told us what happened on the day back in January�
It was January 18th, 2005; and everyone was busy preparing for the wedding party for their second daughter that supposed to be held at home on the next day. Duong Van Sy and his brother-in-law, Pham Huu Nam were assigned to set up a temporary rain shelter in the front yard. Photo: Duong Van Sy 2: Sy�s parent-in-law�s, the accident site In the morning, the two brothers had brought home enough bamboos and other materials for the work; and now, in the afternoon, they would put up the palm leaf roof. At 5p.m., all the palm leaves were already in place, the only thing left was to tie the leaves to the bamboo frame. Sy went inside the home and brought out a bunch of small size steel wire while Nam went into the kitchen for a large knife. They sat on the ground, put the wires on a wood junk and used the large knife to chop them into short pieces. The small wires stuck into the soft wood instead of breaking into pieces. Sy told Nam go look for a metal junk as an anvil. The boy went to the back yard and took out an 82mm mortar that he found in the morning when go cutting bamboo. At this time there was nobody around except the two of them; and neither Sy nor Nam would think of anything else other than chopping those wires into short pieces. The explosion came shortly after that, turning the small and quiet village into chaos. Both men were found seriously injured but Sy was worse. He died on the way to the district hospital. Nam�s major injuries were in his eyes.
The wedding was cancelled. The temporary shelter was then quickly finished with help from other men in the village to serve as a place for funeral ceremony. The families were divided: some went to the district hospital taking care of the injured one while others would take care of the funeral and burial ceremonies at the village. The family had to sell 2 buffaloes and borrowed another 12 million dongs from the neighbors for the ceremonies and medical treatments.
Sy�s two sons are all small. The first one is 4 years old; the second is only two. His wife, Pham Thi Van is 23 years old. In the above photo Chi is granting the family financial support to help with the children's schooling as well as funeral expenses for their father.
Case # 3: Pham Van Kien; Born: 1988. Accident Date: July 29th, 2005. Injury: Abdomen, colostomy.

Kien�s family has a cassava farm in a hill about 2 km from the village. On July 29th, 2005, he left home at 7 to do some weeding for the cassava. He was alone at the farm, but down the hill foot there were 4 kids herding their cows. At 9, Kien�s mother returned home from the local market, and just as she entered the house, she heard an explosion. She thought somebody were digging a well and use explosive to break the hard layer of rock. 15 minutes later, a lady rushed into her house with the bad news that her son was seriously injured on the farm. Kien�s older brother immediately run up to the farm and saw 3 kids were trying to get his brother down the slope; blood was springing out from his abdomen. Kien was taken to the commune aid station and forwarded to the district hospital.
We met Kien�s mother and brother at the house. The father and a sister had already gone and stayed at the hospital to look after Kien. Kien�s mother told us the accident happenings. Tiredness and anxiety was written on her face.
We said goodbye to the mother and the brother after assuring them that CPI would help cover all the treatment expenses. We arrived at the Ky Anh district hospital at 12:05. There we met the father, the sister and an aunt. Kien was awake. He wore a colostomy bag. The father said that a piece of fragment penetrated into his abdomen and punched 4 holes in Kien�s intestine and that the surgery lasted 2 and a half hours.
Kien family owns a poverty card; an official certificate that verifies that the family�s monthly income is below the poverty line.
Case # 4: Phan Duy Bay; Born: 1978. Accident Date: June 6th, 2005. Injury: Killed on spot.
We left Ky Anh district, Ha Tinh province to driving south to Quang Trach district, Quang Binh province. Duc and I didn�t talk much to each other as our thoughts still with those families we�ve just visited. The beautiful green color of the rice paddies on our way to Quang Luu commune helped reduce a little bit of our pitiful feelings.
We arrived at Phan Duy Bay�s home at 16:27. Received us was Bay�s mother, holding her youngest grand son in her arms. The wife was still some where on the field.
Bay is the youngest sibling in his family; and according to the local tradition, the youngest child is to live with and take care of the parents. He got married in 1999, and his wife, Nguyen Thi Nga became a new member in the family. Their first son came out the next year, and the second was born in 2003. Being the major bread winner of the family, Bay had been struggled for a living. He sold his labor to different jobs for the exchange of any kind of profit. His wife is helping him with the farm work, raising the two small children and taking care of her mother-in-law.
One day Bay met a man in the next village, who told him of a new way to earn a living. The new job requires frequent travel. Bay usually leaves home at 5a.m. and won�t returned until 7 p.m. The average income is 30,000VND/day (equivalent to US$ 2.00); sometimes is 50,000VND/day. The more he works, the further he has to travel, as the scrap metal would run out after a while.
It was June 9th, 2005 and Bay left home a bit earlier than usual. He couldn�t earn much during the last three days, thus today he decided to go further� The afternoon of the day was dragged in pain for Bay�s mother and wife. The bad news reached home at 2 p.m but Bay�s body was not taken home until 9 p.m.
Bay�s wife returned home from work, and as soon as we introduced ourselves, I saw tears in her eyes as she grasped her youngest child into her lap.
Case # 5: Pham Van Dao; Born: 1983. Accident Date: January, 2004. Injury: Lost 90% of eye sight.

Our next beneficiary is Pham Van Dao. This is not a new accident case as it happened back in January of 2004. We already responded to the accident, supported the family with all medial treatment for his eyes. Then the family�s living condition was assessed and we decided to help the family purchase a cow for them to generate their income. It is also a suitable work for Dao to take the cow out for grass. Mr. Pham Van Tuyen, Dao�s father had spent 4 days in the neighboring villages and he finally located a 5 year-old-female cow in a village 8 km away.
We �escorted� Mr. Tuyen to the cow�s owner to accomplish some required paper work and pay our assistance (66,6% of the total value in cash). It was getting dark as we drove to the place. The cow�s owner is a 78 years old woman, with very nice characters. She currently owns two cows and wants to sell one to get money spending on other things. The agreed price was 4.5 million VND (equivalent to US$ 290.00) and to our own assessment, the cow would worth more than that as she was in her pregnancy and would deliver a calf in three months time.
At 7:30, we said goodbye to the kind lady to take Mr. Tuyen back to his home. We still have another 50km to drive on the �low-speed highway� to get to a place to rest.

Case # 6: Nguyen Van Cuong; Born: 1968. Accident Date: July 19th, 2005. Injury: Killed on spot.

We started the second day of our field trip with 40km drive. The work we did yesterday was assessed as �productive�, though full of sorrow. This morning we head west of Quang Binh province, take the new Ho Chi Minh highway to Phuc Trach commune.
After short greeting and introduction at the commune people�s committee, an official took us to the victim�s home of Nguyen Van Cuong. A small, wooden house located next to a big catholic church. Like other homes we visited yesterday, there was nothing in the house that worth more than 100,000VND (US$ 6.00). The couples (Cuong and his wife) lived here with their two children. Their son is three years old and their daughter is nearly three months old. For a living, Cuong used to follow his buddies go to the forest to collect firewood; he also trades his labor for any kind of work. But for the last three months he had to stay or work near his home for his wife had just has a baby.
On July 19th, 2005; Cuong got up and cook breakfast for his wife. He didn�t leave his home till 8 o�clock. He intended to work through lunch as the work place is 5 km from home and it would take him one hour just to get there. His work didn�t last long since at 10 o�clock, his hoe blade hit something and an explosion occurred. When locals arrived at the scene, Cuong was found dead.
Though we had tried our best to stay calm during the visit, the grieving wife and the image of their three months old daughter made a deep impression in our souls.

Wednesday, August 3, 2005

Toan and Son's Wedding

Thank you to Chi for sending photos of Toan's wedding to the home office. Below is a picture of the happy couple with Duc on the left and Chi on the right.

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Pentagon to Resume Landmine Production

This release was sent to us from the International Campaign to Ban Landmines and reprinted from HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH. Clear Path International takes no official stand on this issue believing our work speaks for itself.

Washington, August 3, 2005
Human Rights Watch


The Bush administration appears poised to resume the production of antipersonnel mines, Human Rights Watch said today in a new briefing paper.
The United States, which has not manufactured antipersonnel mines since 1997, will make a decision in December whether to begin production of a new antipersonnel mine called Spider. The Pentagon has requested a total of $1.3 billion for development and production activities for another new antipersonnel mine called the Intelligent Munitions System, with a full production decision expected in 2008.

Human Rights Watch said that these developments are the result of the Bush administration�s landmine policy announced in February 2004 under which the U.S. abandoned its long-held objective of joining the 1997 Mine Ban Treaty, which comprehensively prohibits the use, production, trade or stockpiling of antipersonnel mines.

"We are beginning to see the bitter fruit of the new Bush administration landmine policy," said Steve Goose, director of Human Rights Watch�s Arms division.
"The U.S. appears well on the way to resuming production of antipersonnel mines. Renewed export and renewed use of these inhumane weapons may not be far behind."
The United States has not exported antipersonnel mines since 1992 and has not used them since 1991 in the Gulf War.
According to a media report which the Pentagon has yet to confirm or deny, in May 2005, the U.S. Army was to begin deploying to Iraq a new remote-controlled landmine system called Matrix, which relies on technology developed for Spider.
Human Rights Watch expressed concern that a new U.S. proposal for an international prohibition on export of landmines that do not self-destruct will pave the way for the resumption of U.S. export of antipersonnel mines that do self-destruct. A self-destructing mine blows itself up after a set period of time. For a critique
of self-destructing mines, see http://hrw.org/english/docs/2004/02/27/7681.htm
"Any future production, trade or use of antipersonnel mines would put the United States squarely at odds with the emerging international consensus against the weapon, and would draw strong criticism from its closest allies," said Goose.
A total of 145 countries have joined the Mine Ban Treaty and another eight have signed but not yet ratified. This includes every member of NATO, as well as Japan, Australia and other key military allies. With very few exceptions, nearly every nation has endorsed the goal of a global ban on all antipersonnel mines at some point in the future. Even many states not party to the Mine Ban Treaty have stopped production, trade and use of the weapon.
Human Rights Watch said that States Parties to the Mine Ban Treaty would have to consider ending any investments they may have in U.S. companies producing or exporting the new antipersonnel mines. States Parties to the Mine Ban Treaty cannot "assist" in any way with acts that are prohibited by the treaty.
American officials have often claimed that U.S. mines are not a significant factor in the global landmine problem, and it is likely that this argument would be used in part to justify any decision to renew production of antipersonnel mines. However, the U.S. exported over 5.6 million antipersonnel mines to 38 countries between 1969 and 1992. Deminers in at least 29 mine-affected countries have reported the presence of nine different types of U.S.-manufactured antipersonnel mines and four types of antivehicle mines, including both non-self-destructing and self-destructing types.
Human Rights Watch believes that the Bush administration should reverse its decision not to join the Mine Ban Treaty, and should not insist on the right to use self-destruct antipersonnel mines indefinitely. In its briefing paper, Human Rights Watch recommends that:
- Research and development on or production of mines or munitions capable of being victim-activated should be immediately halted. Continued funding for the Spider program should be made contingent on the removal of the battlefield override feature. Continued funding for the Intelligent Munitions System should be dependent on the compliance of this program with the Mine Ban Treaty.
- The Department of Defense should publicly clarify whether the Matrix mine system has already been deployed, and if it is capable of being victim-activated. The Department of Defense should also provide details on target identification and the protections afforded civilians in areas Matrix mines are used.
- The Department of Defense should clarify current policy regarding use of Claymore mines with tripwires, and should prohibit such use everywhere, including South Korea.
- The U.S. Mine Export Moratorium should be made permanent. Any interpretations of or exceptions to the Mine Export Moratorium should be publicly disclosed, as well as what understandings the United States observes regarding the transfer of mines prohibited by CCW Amended Protocol II.
- The appropriate Congressional committees should be notified on an annual basis of any export or transfers of antipersonnel mines, regardless of the intended purposes of the mines or the number of mines.
"Back in Business? U.S. Landmine Production and Exports" is available in English at http://hrw.org/backgrounder/arms/arms0805/

Mine Survivor to Bike Across Death Valley

The following is a press release from our friends at Mines Advisory Group and Stuart Hughes

mag2.jpgStuart Hughes, a BBC World Affairs Producer, who lost his leg in a landmine explosion in 2003 while covering the war in Iraq, is planning to cycle through Death Valley, California - one of the hottest places on earth - to raise �15,000 for the Mines Advisory Group (MAG). Funds raised will be used to help MAG clear dangerous remnants of conflict across the world.



On Monday 1st August, Hughes will launch the MAG / Ceia USA Death Valley challenge by starting his temperature acclimatisation in the special hothouse facility at The British Olympic Medical Centre, Harrow. Death Valley has summer temperatures averaging well over 100� Fahrenheit and has an annual rainfall of only 1.96 inches. The Centre uses a special chamber to create extreme conditions � heat, cold and altitude � to help elite British athletes in their training.
Stuart, who has just returned from covering the Tour de France, originally started cycling because he found walking difficult with his prosthetic leg. He is currently cycling 100 miles a week in preparation for the Death Valley challenge and will lead a team of four other cyclists on the 200 mile trip through the Valley in November 2005. Currently stationed in Iraq with the BBC, one co-cyclist Craig Summers, Safety and Security Adviser for the BBC�s High Risk Team, is overcoming the security issues by training on a stationary exercise bike in Baghdad!
Since stepping on an anti-personnel mine in 2003, Hughes has given talks across the UK and overseas to raise awareness of the scale of the international landmine problem. Hughes says �As a landmine survivor myself, I am proud to support MAG�s efforts to rid the world of these horrific weapons. By doing this gruelling challenge, we hope to raise enough funds to help clear the real death valleys � those areas across the world that are blighted by landmines.�
Nick Fellows of the British Olympic Medical Centre says: �Our acclimation chamber provides the perfect training environment for any competitive sport in extreme environments. The British Olympic Squad found it invaluable in their preparation for the Athens and Salt Lake City Olympics and a few sessions here will certainly stand Stuart in good stead for his Death Valley quest.�
Known for its �first-in last-out� approach to mine-infested regions of the world, MAG clears the way so that international aid agencies can safely deliver humanitarian assistance to war-torn communities. MAG employs more than 2,300 people worldwide and has destroyed close to two million landmines and unexploded bombs since 1992.
Stuart, who has just returned from covering the Tour de France, originally started cycling because he found walking difficult with his prosthetic leg. He is currently cycling 100 miles a week in preparation for the Death Valley challenge and will lead a team of four other cyclists on the 200 mile trip through the Valley in November 2005. Currently stationed in Iraq with the BBC, one co-cyclist Craig Summers, Safety and Security Adviser for the BBC�s High Risk Team, is overcoming the security issues by training on a stationary exercise bike in Baghdad!
Since stepping on an anti-personnel mine in 2003, Hughes has given talks across the UK and overseas to raise awareness of the scale of the international landmine problem. Hughes says �As a landmine survivor myself, I am proud to support MAG�s efforts to rid the world of these horrific weapons. By doing this gruelling challenge, we hope to raise enough funds to help clear the real death valleys � those areas across the world that are blighted by landmines.�
Nick Fellows of the British Olympic Medical Centre says: �Our acclimation chamber provides the perfect training environment for any competitive sport in extreme environments. The British Olympic Squad found it invaluable in their preparation for the Athens and Salt Lake City Olympics and a few sessions here will certainly stand Stuart in good stead for his Death Valley quest.�
Known for its �first-in last-out� approach to mine-infested regions of the world, MAG clears the way so that international aid agencies can safely deliver humanitarian assistance to war-torn communities. MAG employs more than 2,300 people worldwide and has destroyed close to two million landmines and unexploded bombs since 1992.

Saturday, July 30, 2005

Compassion in our In Box

These notes were in our email box today in response to a recent death in Vietnam:


"Clear Path is answering a call that struggles to be heard above the clamor of a greedy and often indifferent world. I and many, many others appreciate the hard work you do. Thank you. My heart goes out to this victim, his family, and all the others that have gone before him. Thanks to you, perhaps there will be fewer to follow.

Beth
Manchester Center, VT"

"JeanneE and I, and the members of Southern Vermont Veterans for Peace Chapter 88 express our condolences.

Jozef"


Thank you so much Beth and Jozef for the boost this morning. Your notes will be passed on to the family.

Wednesday, July 27, 2005

U.S. CPI Delegation in Phnom Penh, Cambodia

CPI Adisory Board Member Joan Widdifield is leading a group of CPI supporters through SE Asia and blogging their experiences!
We are in Phnom Penh. Like Vietnam signs of economic growth are everywhere.

Tomorrow we meet with Sarath, the Director of CVCD, Cambodian Volunteers for Community Development, and Arun, former Director. CVCD is an organization of amazing people who serve underserved populations in Cambodia, including women coming out of the sex trade, the poorest of the poor, and landmine/uxo victims. They conduct vocational training for landmine/uxo victims. It is fun to make the rounds to visit the graduates of the program and see the big smiles when they boast of supporting their families with their newly acquired skills (such as small motor repair, computer, English, sewing).

Another one of our missions is to transport 186 feet from Cambodia to Maesot, Thailand. Cambodia high quality rubber feet, and the prosthetic workshop in Maesot needs them because of the high number of uxo accidents each year. In Cambodia one out of ever 260 people is landmine/uxo affected. We've only been here a matter of hours and have already seen several amputees, including a boy who is missing both of his arms and is crippled and in a wheel chair. His brother is pushing him around Phnom Penh begging for food.

On Monday evening we're off to Bangkok where we'll fly to Maesot the next morning to visit the prosthetic workshop for Karen ethnic minority Burmese refugees. Dr. Cynthia runs the clinic. If you google her name with "Maesot" you can read about her. She is often called "Mother Theresa of Burma." Needless to say, she is an inspiring tireless woman (received a Nobel Peace Prize Nomination last year!) A few years ago we dedicated the prosthetic workshop there to my late husband, so it's always a special visit for me!


Man Killed By Vietnam War Era Bomb

A 41 year-old man was killed by a Vietnam War-era piece of ordnance on July 22nd, 2005 in the Vinh Linh district of Quang tri province, Vietnam.

Nguyen Cuu Lam dicovered the bomb while working in the fields and was trying dismantle it to sell the metal for scrap when it exploded and killed him instantly.

Many people in this poor, rural area resort to dismantling bombs they find in order to augment their meager incomes, often to deadly results.

Although the Vietnam War ended 30 years ago, by some estimates over 350,000 tons of bombs that did not detonate when dropped remain in the ground. This ordnance regularly claims lives and limbs in this still war-ravaged province. Since the conflict ended in 1975, nearly 40,000 Vietnamese have been killed by by these munitions.
Clear Path International serves landmine and bomb accident survivors, their families and their communities in former war zones in Southeast Asia. This assistance takes the form of both direct and indirect medical and social services to survivor families as well as equipment support to hospitals. Current Clear Path projects are in Vietnam, Cambodia and on the Thai-Burma border.
More information about Clear Path International can be found on the web at www.cpi.org.

Tuesday, July 26, 2005

Thank you, Stuart!

Fellow blogger, journalist and landmine survivor Stuart Hughes interviewed me today for an upcoming podcast (I really love podcasts... I have been listening to them like mad... podcasting is like Tivo for the more cerebral).

Stuart, a journalist at the BBC (or the Beeb, as his blog has taught me!) lost his lower right leg to a landmine while covering a story in Northern Iraq.

He has since become an activist for landmine causes and a spokesperson for our friends at the Mines Advisory Group.I first heard of Stuart when I read this article he wrote on Cambodian mine victims.


His blog (which is produced independently of his work at "the Beeb") can be found at http://stuarthughes.blogspot.com/ His podcast RSS feed is here.

Thank you, Stuart...!


Monday, July 25, 2005

An Update on Ha

IMG_0090.jpg


Ha is one of our beneficiaries who has needed multiple operations. The entry below is from Toan who just visited Ha at the Da Nang Orthopedic & Rehabilitation Center (DNORC). Read more about Ha's story here and see more pictures of her here.

We visited Ho Thi Ha on July 21st in DNORC with a CPI delegation from U.S. She just got her fifth surgery on July 7^th by Doctor Thanh. It is 2 months and a half already since April 30^th when she came back to DNORC for her legs readjustment. On the day we visited her, Ha had an X-ray to check if everything is ok with her two legs. She still seated and moved with a wheelchair right now. However, she looked so great this time with a bright smile often in her face. According to Dr. Thanh, she had to seat on the wheelchair to wait for her legs recovered and stable after the surgery. It would take her some time on the wheelchair until she can walk, said Dr. Thanh; at least, one more month from now on. Of course, Ha could walk straight after the fourth surgery. Nevertheless, the fifth one would help her to walk straighter without pain. That is what Ha also wanted. She expressed her homesick with me when she has been staying in DNORC for quite a long time. She seemed very optimistic and hopeful with her legs straighter in the coming time. �Without CPI support, I would have to walk on my knees for the rest of my life�, Ha said. "It was so miserable in the past walking on my knee", Ha recalled and she then smiled happily, "I would never expect that I could walk straightly on my two legs. From now on, I could walk easily to work on the field and to take care of my younger sisters and brothers. I am so excited and grateful to CPI and to you all for your meaningful support".

By looking at her face, I realized that the happiness is simple but would only come to those who could respect it. Ha had suffered a lot from the landmine accident. She had also struggled a lot to live and walk on her own. And now she is deserved to have the happiness of walking straightly on her two legs.

Sunday, July 24, 2005

Congratulations Toan and Son!

So often the news on this blog is tragic and seldom do we have cause for celebration... but this is an exception!

Our team leader in Vietnam, Tran Thi Thanh Toan is getting married next week to CPI outreach worker Hoang Phuoc Son in Quang Tri Province Vietnam.

Please join me in wishing them a long, happy future together!

toanson.jpg

Son, left, and Toan in the mountains of Northern Vietnam


Saturday, July 23, 2005

News from CPI U.S. Delegation - Hue, Vietnam

After we interviewed Ms. Ha about her journey of five painful surgeries for white phosphorous uxo injuries we all clapped for her. Many of the people who are responsible for her care, Dr. Than, Mr. Cuc, Miss Huyen, Duc, and Toan were there supporting her; others such as Hugh, Imbert, Martha, and James were mentioned and there in spirit. We were all gathered around her and she filled with emotion and started tearing up. Then small yellow leaves started raining from the tree overhead, showering her. It was a beautiful picture. A few others started crying, and we all hugged and celebrated Ha's tenacity and courage. I feel honored to know her and wish I had half of her spirit and strength.

Chi gave me all of the photos from five years of CPI's work with uxo victims. Last night I was looking through them and was stunned by the numbers of tragedies. It really hits you hard when you see beneficiary photos one after another, some injured some killed. I was also struck by what an honor it is to be given all these private photos of people in their darkest moments of grief. I will work hard to honor these families and bear witness to their horrific experiences.

Friday, July 22, 2005

Joan Widdifield and Friends Reach Vietnam

CPI Advisory Board member Joan Widdifield is traveling in Vietnam with a group of CPI supporters and filming her experiences. After being delayed in Taiwan, they arrived this week.

We landed in Taiwan prepared to wait for our connecting flight and were told that all flights were cancelled due to the typhoon. We had our passports taken away and were placed in a hotel with the instructions that we were not to leave. High winds and rain made for a loud 24 hours and interesting rumors about the specter staying up to four days. We were told that we'd get a flight to Saigon the next morning, but that we had to be in the bus by 3am. We were all standing in line waiting to board the plane when people started noticing that the flight was headed to Hong Kong.



Natalie and I had met Patti in San Francisco and then Clark in the Taipei hotel. When we learned we'd be going to Hong Kong we decided to just enjoy our time together and spend a chunk of the day exploring some of Hong Kong. We had to spend the night in Saigon, but got to visit our friends Geoff and Thuy at JUICE, their fabulous restaurant. Geoff has now opened a burrito restaurant, and we've heard from a man we met in Taipei that its better than burritos in the States.
Since we hit the ground in Hue we've started a full schedule of meetings with the staff, and with Dave and then Cliff at MAG, Mine Advisory Group. Cliff was very generous with his time and drove us around to see the uxo clearing sites. We learned a lot from him about the issues about clearance.
We spent today in Danang at the Danang Orthopedic and Rehabilitation Center meeting with the director, Mr. Cuc, an orthopedic surgeon, Dr. Than, and Ms. Huyen, Mr. Cuc's interpreter. They showed us around and introduced us to many amputees who had uxo accidents. Most were farmers.
Then we interviewed Ha, an endearing beneficiary who has suffered more than any human I've ever heard of, but who continues to thrive. She had a bomb accident when she was eleven and her feet were fused to her shins, and her calves were fused to her thighs for a decade until Clear Path identified her and sent her for surgeries. She crawled for half of her life, but now after 5 surgeries will be able to walk.
Then we met with the sweet 13 year-old boy who lost both of his feet and most of one of his arms in March. His father is also an amputee, from a landmine accident during the war. And, his grandfather was also a uxo survivor who eventually died from the wounds.
Mr. Cuc and Dr. Than said that they treat about 100 new uxo patients each year, and 1,000 landmine/uxo patients each year total. These unexploded bombs terrorize people and are slow weapons of mass destruction.
We are taking lots of photos and will post some soon, hopefully. Our delegation Natalie, Clark, Skye, Patti, and myself and of course the multi-talented CPI staff of Toan, Chi, Nhi, Phoung, and Duc are enjoying our time together and supporting each other. Until next time, tom biet.

Wednesday, July 20, 2005

Thank you Ben, Sally, & Company!

All of us at Clear Path would like to thank Ben Taylor, Sally Taylor, David Saw, Amity Fletcher, Rumer Joyce, Carrie Tree, Rick Redington, Larry Ciancia, and Dean Bragonier for putting on a spectacular show for us on July 18!

We had a capacity crowd of 220 people (all brought in with an advertising budget of 60 dollars) and raised over 5000 dollars for our work in SE Asia.

Artist websites:
www.bentaylorband.com
www.sallytaylor.com
www.carrietree.com
www.davidsaw.com
www.rickredington.com

Thank you all for a great time!!




From Left to right: Amity Fletcher, Carrie Tree, Ben Taylor, David Saw on guitar, Sally Taylor. Not pictured: Rumer Joyce, Rick Redington


Thursday, July 14, 2005

U.S. CPI delegation preparing to take off to Vietnam, Cambodia, and the Thai-Burma border

This will be my fourth trip to Southeast Asia with CPI as the
Psychological Advisor. It is my first without going with co-founder Imbert. I will miss his company a lot! We will be going to Vietnam for 12 days and then to Cambodia and the Thai-Burma border for about three days each.

In a few days we take off for Vietnam! My 13 year-old daughter, Natalie will be going for her second year in a row. We will be joined by Clark Slagle, Psychology doctoral student and Tai Kwon Do instructor from Utah, and Skye Fitzgerald, who has studied the landmine issue for a long time, and is finishing his film about the landmine issue in Cambodia, BOMBHUNTERS (www.bombhunters.com), and Patti Duncan a Ph.D. in Asian Women Studies from Oregon.

We have actually never met our fellow travellers, but share the common interest of landmine action. Our goal is to learn as much as we can from the staff, beneficiaries and other professionals we meet and come home and spread the word about these slow weapons of mass destruction.

Every time we go to meet with a beneficiary I always turn to my colleagues and say, "People need to know about this." So, this is my goal: to spread the word about this long-term, chronic effect of war. Peter Davis, director of the great film about the Vietnam-American War, HEARTS & MINDS, says that in the media we rarely see what happens on the other side of the guns. Our Vietnam staff is witnessing the far-reaching effects of the Vietnam-American war every day.

What seems meaningful to the beneficiaries is that we travel from afar and bear witness to their tragedy, which show them that what happened to them matters.
I will never forget when we visited a very young man in the hospital who had both of his hands blown off and his face and chest burned the day before in an uxo accident. He and his young wife were both in shock. We couldn't do anything to change what happened. But the CPI staff, Hugh and Miss Phoung, gave the couple some money to use for food (in Vietnamese hospitals you have to provide your own food) and other necessities. The wife looked incredulous that someone showed up to help. In times of horror and loss these kinds of gestures are very meaningful.
We hope to support the VN office staff in their work and bear witness to the tragic legacy of war that still terrorizes innocent villagers in Vietnam on a regular basis.

Wednesday, July 13, 2005

Boy, 14, Found Dead from US-Vietnam War Era Explosive


Quang Tri Province, Vietnam- A young boy was found dead by his mother last week after he failed to return home from farming peanuts early in the morning on July 8, 2005.

Duong Ba Tien, 14, apparently was digging in the dirt when an unknown Vietnam War era device exploded and killed him on the spot. His mother found him a few hours later.

"Here explosions happen all the time." his father reported to Clear Path Intenational a US based landmine and bomb accident survivor assistance program operating in central Vietnam "We hear explosions everyday."

View a video of his interview here in Windows Media Format.



Although the Vietnam War ended 30 years ago, by some estimates over 350,000 tons of bombs that did not detonate when dropped remain in the ground. This ordnance regularly claims lives and limbs in this still war-ravaged province. Since the conflict ended in 1975, nearly 40,000 Vietnamese have been killed by by these munitions.
Clear Path International serves landmine and bomb accident survivors, their families and their communities in former war zones in Southeast Asia. This assistance takes the form of both direct and indirect medical and social services to survivor families as well as equipment support to hospitals. Current Clear Path projects are in Vietnam, Cambodia and on the Thai-Burma border.
More information about Clear Path International can be found on the web at www.cpi.org.

Monday, June 27, 2005

Man Injured By Explosive in Vietnam

(Vo The Vinh, aged 46) An accident happened to a 46 year-old man in Gio Linh district of Quang Tri province at 10h a.m on Saturday, June 25^th . A piece of ordnance detonated while he was gardening outside his home.

He received multiple injuries in his face, eyes and cheek. He was then taken to Quang Tri General Hospital for first aid and treatment
Vo The Vinh 4.JPG

Friday, June 24, 2005

JSC Students Reach Vermont

A group of students from Johnson State College (JSC) is spending the next few weeks with Clear Path International in Vietnam. This is possible due to a partnership between Clear Path, the Break Away Program and JSC. The students and staff will be posting tales and photos from their journey to this blog. You can read all of their posts by clicking here.

Catch up
Posted by Galen

I am now at home in Vermont, but wanted to update the blog and tell you a little about our last few days in Vietnam.

6/15 Before leaving Dong Ha we went to the CPI office to say thank you and farewell. This is taken from my journal: " I felt the closing with the CPI staff was important and letting them know how much we appreciated their time with us. Chi recorded most of our final visit, including Chris singing his signature Vietnamese song. I am sure we will see it on the website. Our group sang "Old MacDonald" one last time. It was so great to be with the CPI staff the past couple of days and make the connection between us stronger. I feel like now I have a greater understanding of the organizaton on a whole because I have seen the support that they are able to give to victims and their families. I have now met those families and feel honored to have heard their stories."

6/16 We traveled to Ha Noi today after saying good bye to the hotel family and all the wonderful people who took care of us there. When we landed in Ha Noi the first thing we did was go and eat Pho, a speciality. It is noodle soup with pork that stews in a bug cauldron for hours. It was an experience just as all our food consumption here has been. Ha Noi is a whole new world compared to Hue. Much bigger and busier streets. A few of us walked around and saw an old Catholic Churth that was build in the beginning of the French occupation of Vietnam. We played soccor with some kids on the street outside the church all the while dodging motor bikes and other various vehicles.

6/17 We were able to visit the Friendship Village this morning, which was long anticipated. It is an organization and community that works with children and veterans who suffer disabilities, both physical and mental, that are a direct affect from contamination of Agent Orange. Our visit there was so wonderful! It is amazing to see a community that has pulled together their resouces in the best way possible to serve their benificiaries to the best of their ability

In the afternoon we went to see the Water Puppets. In order to fully understand this, please ask the people you know who went on this trip, it is difficult to put it in words for this.

6/18 It is my birthday in Vietnam! The group threw me a great party and i was able to spend the morning with Ho Chi Minh at his moseleum! I was fantastic!

6/19 10 am we send Jill and Angie off to Cambodia
12:40 pm We begin our journey home


June Proves Dangerous in Vietnam

This report comes from our Vietnam office:

Pls find below the info of new accidents that we responded in June:

1. (Nguyen Si Phu-aged 12; Phan Thanh Hieu-born in 1993) An accident happened to a boy in Bo Trach district, Quang Binh province in the afternoon on May 29^th . It was Sunday and Phu�s day off. He went out to play and saw a cluster bomb on the street. He took it with him and came to his aunt� house which is quite far from his. He called Hieu, his cousin to go to the front yard near the Commune People�s Committee. They both then discovered the bomb. Finding nothing and having no interest in the cluster bomb, Hieu left just when Phu dropped the bomb on the ground. Phu was killed at spot while his cousin was injured at the legs.

This accident was reported to CPI by Landmine Survivor Network, another Mine Action Program based in Quang Binh Province. Bo Trach is their main project area. However, they requested CPI to support the one killed only but left the injured one for them to support.

2. (Le Phi-born in 1957, father & his daughter Le Thi Buom-born in 1989) A 48-year-old man was killed on the spot and his daughter injured when a 81mm mortar exploded in Huong So commune of Hue city in Central Vietnam.

The explosion occurred at 10 a.m on Tuesday when Le Phi, a scrap collector and also an ice-cream seller, was removing the charge of a mortar with a large knife at the back of his home.

His 16-year-old daughter got injured at her leg just while she was cleaning vegetables at the well near by.

Le Phi often went along the streets to sell ice-cream for money and also change ice-cream for scrap that he took it home and later on resold it to the scrap dealers.

3. (Phan Van Bay-born in 1977) A 29-year-old man was killed on the spot by an unknown UXO exploded in Phong Hoa commune, Tuyen Hoa district of Quang Binh province.

The accident happened on Thursday, June 9^th when he was searching for scrap metal in the above-mentioned area. However, he in fact lived in Quang Luu commune, Quang Trach district in Quang Binh province. He left behind his wife with two small children.

Tuyen Hoa is a mountainous district where is very popular for scrap metal collection and where happened a number of severe accidents that CPI have responded so far.

4. (Hoang Van Tuan-born in 1972) A 33-year-old man was killed on the spot by an unknown ordnance exploded in Hai Lang district of Quang Binh province.

The accident happened on Friday, June 10^th while he was collecting scrap metal. He left behind his old mother. (His father died long time ago)

Hai Lang SoLISA reported this accident to CPI.

5. (Hoang Thai Phai-age???) An accident happened to a Pahi ethnic man on June 10^th in Phong My commune, Phong Dien district of Thua Thien Hue province when a landmine detonated as he was trying to extinguish a fire in a forest.

He got multiple injured and was after the accident taken to the local health center for first aid and treatment

Phong My, a hilly area used to be a military base during the war.

6. June 12, 2005 Sunday 3:46 AM GMT
(Mr. Trung - Binh Dinh province & Mr. Dung -Phu Yen Province) A man was killed and another seriously injured when a Vietnam War-era shell exploded in the central province of Phu Yen, state press reported Sunday. The accident occurred when two scrap metal traders were attempting to break open the American-made 105-millimetre (4.2-inch) shell on Wednesday in order to extract explosives, said the youth daily Thanh Nien.

Police found 11 other unexploded shells of the same type at the victim's house, it said.

Monday, June 20, 2005

Medical Donations Program Hits Milestone

Imbert Matthee, co-founder of Clear Path, heads up our medical donations program. He has authored this report

Sary Math crouches down between two pallets of shrink-wrapped boxes of surgical supplies. He sets his feet against one and presses his back against the other until the whole stack behind him moves slightly towards the inside container wall.

shipments.jpg
He has just created a bit more space between the pallets, enough to fit a stack of extra boxes in the shipment we�re sending to Cambodia: several hundred thousand dollars worth of surgical supplies and medical equipment for five hospitals and charities there.

Just like the ones Sary and I have loaded before, this container will have a lot of items the hospitals are looking for: beds, gurneys, exam tables, suction machines, wheelchairs, crutches, walkers, ventilators, an anesthesia machine, an incubator and everything they might need to perform surgeries.

But in one way, this one isn�t like the others. It�s a milestone: Number 50 since we started sending donated hospital relief goods four years ago and I still can�t quite believe it. If anyone would have told Sary and me we�d be up to that many when we begun, I would have been incredulous.

I met Sary at the Cambodian Honorary Consul�s office in Seattle in early 2001. He was with some men from the Cambodian American community who wanted to help pay for a shipment of four containers to Preah Ket Mealea Hospital in Phnom Penh. An American Vietnam veteran living in Kamloops had alerted us to the liquidation of three hospitals there and we were looking for a way to pay for the container shipments at $2,500 a piece.
Sary helped raise the money for those first containers and he has been volunteering with medical shipments ever since. We now have a great partner in Canada who raises the funds to cover the shipping cost of our containers, which have gone to Vietnam, Cambodia, Indonesia, India, Malawi, Uganda, Honduras, Guatemala, Peru, Bolivia, Colombia, Brazil, Jordan and the Philippines.
Earlier this year, we were offered a very large donation of exam tables by Midmark Corp. in California. With the help of volunteer Lucas Hess in Sacramento, we have loaded 20 containers with 44 tables each for hospitals and ministries of health on almost every continent.
It hasn�t been hard to locate the donations. Our informal network of referrals has grown over time and many donors call us after googling �medical donations� on the web. We can source almost anywhere in the country as long as we know someone local who can inspect the donation.
We stage loading parties to get the items in the container. For this last shipment, we had quite a crew: Sary and his friend Youssef, Mark Holmgren (also a longtime volunteer), Niki Xxxxx (who contributed a ventilator to the shipment for a children�s hospital in Siem Reap) and Frank Cole (a Vietnam veteran from Yakima).
We ordered a high-cube container, which has two extra feet of height inside. That way, we could stack mattresses or boxes on top of the equipment or pallets. Usually, we have only two hours to fit everything in before the trucking company starts charging us to have the driver standing by.
We�re a lot faster now and there�s not much daylight in the �can� when we�re done. Very little space gets wasted. There�s no waste in any aspect of the program. We have donated warehouse space in Georgetown near Boeing Field thanks to the generosity of Kevin Sutherland of Commercial Floor Distributors. Nick Zarcadas, an electrician on Bainbridge Island, donated his old Chevy Astro van to Clear Path to round up smaller donations of equipment and supplies. We rely almost exclusively on volunteers to load the shipments.
Most of the time, we don�t even store the donated items. We apply a just-in-time collection method, ordering the container straight to the donor�s doorstep if there is enough stuff to fill a container and there often is: from hospitals turning over their equipment, from nursing homes, and from clinics.
It�s a form of recycling that makes all the sense in the world. The equipment donated in the Untied States is often in very good condition, though government regulations or new technology have made it obsolete in this market. But in Southeast Asia, where we ship most of the goods, it�s received with open arms.
For instance, a lot of medical facilities here are getting rid of their mechanical beds, the ones you crank to change the position of the patient�s back or legs (this is more critical than one would think for the proper healing of limb injuries and other conditions). They are being replaced with electrical beds that require the push of a button to adjust.
But hospitals in developing countries prefer beds that can be adjusted manually because even if patient rooms or wards have enough electrical outlets, they like to save on their utility bill. And, some countries are prone to blackouts, making the beds inoperable.
So, we�re at 50 thanks to the people whose name I have mentioned and many others. To Sary, Lucas and all you volunteers, donors and sponsors, let�s celebrate this milestone and then do another 50!

Thursday, June 16, 2005

Falklands: Leave our Landmines There

The people of the Falkland Islands have voted to turn down government assistance in clearing landmines from their territories and instead for the money to help those in more grave danger...

Read more here.

Wednesday, June 15, 2005

A Morning with MAG

(Written by Jill Piacitelli)
Day two in Dong Ha. This rural setting has changed some of our morning habits: Dave can�t get up at 5 to hit the badminton scene, people aren�t running back from quick communiqu�ia the internet, and no sweet French morning pastries. Here we wake up and march into the day like soldiers: 7 am sharp, quiet round tables, and the simple hardiness of eggs, a small baguette, and an inch of thick and very black coffee. It does the trick and we file into the van dispatched to our first morning stop back at the CPI office. Today, we will be with their neighbors and peers in landmine work - MAG (Mines Advisory Group -- www.mag.or.uk).



The JSC group shuffles into a small room garnished with few maps and plenty of three-ring binders. The uniformed worker, Cliff, introduces himself: a former long-time British military engineer who now heads up MAG�s mine removal efforts in Vietnam. He is direct and succinct as he explains MAG�s work, which delays some of the shock of his words: �There is easily one UXO or landmine accident a week�, �There were just 2,000 American mines cleared from Gio Lihn�, �Five mines found this week, and it�s just Tuesday�, �We can find 900 pieces in one day at a metal scrap yard�. He answers our questions, and each group member seems to have one or two -- funding, personal reasons, clarifications. He is not patronizing us, and explains everything in detail and frankness.
In a pause, he moves our discussion to the hallway to show us shelves that display many of MAG�s educational souvenirs from 30 or more years ago. It is staggering, the malevolent genius that designs, manufactures, and utilizes these weapons. Necessity is the mother of invention, but war necessitates such a loss of humanity to those involved. Mind boggling to think about, and draws my sympathies to all involved in conflicts. When talking of landmines, Cliff makes the point to say they were designed to maim and demoralize, but not kill. All three categories are covered now in the civilians and beneficiaries we have been meeting.
We are behind now, and so hurriedly head off to visit some MAG mine removal teams in action. The first stop is at a site in a rice field and farming area. The roads to get there are so rough we abandon the van and are shuttled, high speed, in Cliff�s vehicle. Once there, we get a close up view of tedium: crystal clear procedure, basic and simple equipment, methodological sweeping and probing inch by inch and foot by foot -- each worker wearing the dense uniform of caution. The second stop still has us all shaking our heads -- a schoolyard that MAG has finally been allowed on because the children are on summer break. They found 14 pieces just doing the day long exploratory assessment, and 8 since then. By the time we arrived at 11 am, the team had three newly discovered UXO�s lined up: two active mortar shells and one Vietnamese grenade with the fuse clearly and chillingly visible. The school was build post-war on a dump of sorts, and now was a playground of sand, hiding the danger by just .5 meters. Needless to say, we walked directly in the footsteps of our guides at this point, and hurriedly retreated to sidewalk when the orientation was finished.