VSAT Installation at Choutara - Norwegian Red Cross Hospital |
When the dogs wake you up at night with frantic
barking it might be time to put on your shoes and get ready to run. So far, dogs have been reliable indicators of
aftershocks ranging from mild to let’s exit the building. Right now we are sleeping in tents in the
field next to Search and Rescue dogs and they have been a reliable ‘canine
early warning’ of coming aftershocks;
truly ‘man’s best friend’.
Stringing Cable |
The past few days our job in the American Red Cross
IT/Telecoms ERU has been to support field units in the hardest hit areas of
Nepal. Tom McNally, a New Zealand Red Cross team
member and I just returned to Disaster Operations in Kathmandu after installing
communications, internet and wifi to support a rapidly expanding International
Red Cross Operation.
Team Member Tom McNally - NZ Red Cross |
Delayed enroute by a landslide, Tom and I walked from the vehicle to the
landslide blocking the road, gathering with the villagers to watch the slow but
effective clearing of our path. In some
areas whole villages
crumbled and the community is still in shock. But in the rest of Nepal people are moving on
with whatever they can do to help with the disaster relief efforts.
This Entire Hospital Was Erected in 2 Days - Astounding |
Landslide We Encountered On The Way To Choutara - Cleared Fast By Villagers |
Tom
and I drove through crumbled villages on the way to our field units and arrived
on site at the same time as the Red Cross hospital and sanitation teams we are supporting. It was
an eerie scene as we worked well into the night; dozens of Red Cross working by
headlight. Literally overnight a 60 bed
hospital camp was well underway and the next day by afternoon they were
accepting casualties and patients. As
the scene unfolded around us Tom and I worked to get our equipment up and
running; satellite communications, wifi and internet based phone service which
was desperately needed for the 60-100 Red Cross workers to communicate and
coordinate with the outside world. A Norwegian
Search and Rescue team gifted us some equipment as they departed so we even had
a Red Cross laser printer and admin supplies – trivial in civilization but
major luxury for these field teams.
The
units we supported were smiling and appreciative of our efforts, but they are
the superheroes in this story. We move
on to the next site, providing communications, and move on again to the next
site. They stay, living in indescribable
hardship, giving help and hope to destroyed communities.
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