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Navy brings emergency beer to fire-hit Aussie town by Staff Writers Sydney (AFP) Jan 10, 2020 Australia's navy tasked with rescuing bushfire-trapped residents on the southeast coast received a new mission Friday -- delivering beer to a country pub on the verge of running dry. More than a thousand people have been evacuated from the town of Mallacoota, with the military sending landing craft to collect families trapped there since New Year's Eve. But after several shuttle runs and with the immediate emergency ebbing the navy will deliver much-needed supplies, including a precious cargo of tinnies to thirsty survivors, a department of defense spokesperson confirmed to AFP. "The beer is not occupying unnecessary space on HMAS Choules and essential supplies were not offloaded to accommodate the beer," the spokesperson added. Carlton and United Breweries said Friday it had dropped the alcohol at the Cerberus naval base to be delivered to the Mallacoota Hotel, after it was on the verge of running out. The delivery includes 20 kegs and four pallets of beer and cider for a town that usually has a population of around 1,000. "A pub with no beer is bad enough at the best of times," said Carlton and United Breweries CEO Peter Filipovic. "After what Mallacoota residents and firies have been through the least we could do is make sure they could enjoy a beer." "We're not sure if the Navy has ever shipped beer to civilians before but these fires are an extraordinary disaster," said Filipovic. The 16,000-tonne relief ship HMAS Choules was due to return to Mallacoota with the beer on Friday, according to the department of defense.
Ten years after deadly Haiti quake, survivors feel forgotten Port-Au-Prince (AFP) Jan 9, 2020 Ten years ago, Herlande Mitile was left disabled by the massive earthquake that devastated Haiti. Today, she uses a wheelchair jury-rigged with a piece of string, which means she cannot go far. Result: she is trapped in her village outside Port-au-Prince. It was meant to be a model for reconstruction of the country after the disaster. Instead, the 36-year-old Mitile - who once worked in the capital - is dependent on her neighbors to survive. "The doctor told me that if I went to physical ... read more
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