CFTC sends medicines to Haiti.TORONTO -- Canadian Feed The Children is sending $1 million worth of medicine to Haiti to treat and prevent outbreaks of deadly waterborne disease resulting from contaminated contaminated, v 1. made radioactive by the addition of small quantities of radioactive material. 2. made contaminated by adding infective or radiographic materials. 3. an infective surface or object. water and flooded latrines. The medicines will be distributed to hospital patients in Gonaives and in nearby Dessalines, the towns hard hit by floods from Hurricane Jeanne This article deals with the 2004 Hurricane Jeanne. For information on other storms of the same name, see Tropical Storm Jeanne (disambiguation). Hurricane Jeanne was the tenth named storm, the seventh hurricane, and the fifth major hurricane of the 2004 Atlantic hurricane season. . To co-ordinate the transportation and distribution of medicine, CFTC CFTC See: Commodity Futures Trading Commission CFTC See Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). is working in Canada and Haiti with International Child Care, one of its three local partners in the Port-au-Prince area. The other two organizations are ALQ ALQ Alpha Gold Corporation (Canada) ALQ American Lawyers Quarterly ALQ Adaptive Linear Quadratic (filter) ALQ Acceptable Level of Quality ALQ Adult Leadership Qualification Service Oecumenique d Entraide and Organisation de la Mission Evangelique de Salem. CFTC'S field representative is Madsen Gachette, who lives and works in the Port-au-Prince area. In Toronto the Executive Director is Jim Dahl. CT Program Manager Andre Leite, returned to Toronto from Haiti. 416-757-1220 x248 |
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