Miss Laura Smith says: " DISASTER ARE THE MAIN PROBLEM  IN AFRICA"

Hello, I am Miss Young. I received this email claiming to be sent from a non governmental organisation, asking for money. Be very careful when you receive such letters.

In this case, the organisation "Campaign for disaster victims foundation" does not exist, so the money they collect goes directly into the pockets of the criminals that set this up.

The email was sent from Nigeria and the receivers were all members of www.penpalsnow.com.

Go to the homepage to see more stories.
miss young From: cdvf cdvf <cdvfng@hotmail.com>
To: undisclosed-recipients:
Sent: Sunday, January 22, 2006
Subject: DISASTER

                               CAMPAIGN   FOR  DISASTER  VICTIMS FOUNDATION


                                                  10.TAIWO AVENUE.TINUNBU


                                                   LAGOS.NIG
                                                   WEST - AFRICA.
                                                   PHONE:+2342116221
                                                   PHONE+2348033875782
                                                   E.MAIL:CDVFNG@HOTMAIL.COM
                                                  
E.MAIL:CDVFINT@HOTMAIL.COM




                                                   P.R.O  : MISS LAURA SMITH


                         DEAR SIR/MA,

WITH DUE RESPECT WE SAY HELLO TO YOU , WE SHALL REALLY APPRECIATE YOUR
GIVING TIME CREATE TO READ THROUGH THIS HUMAN FEELING INFORMATION.WE
SAW
YOUR E.MAIL ADDRESS IN WWW.PENPALSNOW.COM
MY NAME IS MISS LAURA SMITH  FROM  JAMICA WORKING  WITH THE  CDVF
                 WE ARE  NON GOVERNMENTAL ORGANISATION  HELPING
DISASTER
VICTIMS WORLD WIDE MOSTLY AFRICA,BECAUSE IN THIS PART OF THE WOLRD WE
REALISE  MANY THINGS NEED TO BE DONE TO SAVE  THE POOR PEOPLE OUTHERE
AND
BETTER THE LIFE OF THE  BLACK PEOPLE.


   EVERY YEAR MOSTLY THE AFRICANS MIGRATE TO
AMERICA,EUROPE.OCEANIA,AUSTRALIA AND  OTHER   BETTER ATMOSTPHERE  FOR
BETTER
LIFE.


THE UNITED NATIONS  ,AMERICA AND EUROPEANS GOVERNMENT HAVE TRIED TO
SAVAGE
THIS POOR SITUATION IN THIS BLACK NATION KNOWN AS AFRICAN SO THAT THEY
CAN
HAVE BETTER WAY OF LIVING BUT  YET ALOT STILL NEED TO  BE DONE.


DISASTER ARE THE MAIN PROBLEM  IN AFRICA ,AND ALSO SOME PART OF THE
WORLD,IN
SOME COUNTRIES IN AFRICA DISASTER HAS BEEN PART OF THERE LIVING AND AS
COURSED ALOT OF AGONY,ECONOMIC BREAKDOWN,DEAHTS AND  RENDER MANY PEOPLE
HOMELESS THE AFRICAN GOVERNMENT ,UNITED NATIONS  ,AMERICAN ,EUROPEANS
AND
OTHER COUNTRIES HAVE TRIED TO HELP THIS SITUATION .


DISASTER HAS CLAIMED MANY LIVES AROUND THE WOLRD AND MOSTLY AFRICA.

:LAST YEAR Sunday, 11 December 2005, 06:47 GMT NIGERIA AIRLINE CRASHED
KILLING 103 PEOPLE ON BAORD :
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/4517024.stm
:http://smh.com.au/news/world/nigeria-plane-crash-kills-103/2005/12/11/1134235935061.html

http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/africa/10/23/nigeria.plane/index.html

http://www.usafricaonline.com/aircrashsosoliso2005.html

EFFORTS HAS BEEN MADE TO FIND A LASTING SOLUTION TO THIS UNTIMELY
DISASTER
AND TO ENSURE ADIQUATE AIDE FOR THE SURVIVE VICTIMS AND THE DEAD VICTIM
FAMILIES. HERE ARE SOME LITTLE INFORMATION ABOUT THE PROBLEM FACING THE
AFRICAN COUNTRIES AND ITS
ENVIRONMENT.http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/4139869.stm
http://www.topix.net/disasters

http://www.disasternews.net/news/news.php?articleid=1706

http://www.irinnews.org/frontpage.asp?SelectTheme=Natural_Disasters

THAT IS WHY WE HAVE COME OUT IN LARGE  TO SUPPORT THE UNITED
NATIONS,AMERICA,EUROPE,ASIA, OCEANIA AUSTRALIA AND OTHER CONTINENT
THAT AS
REALLY  WORK TOWARDS THE SAFETY AND DEVELOPEMENT OF AFRICA COUNTRIES
MOSTLY
THE DISASTER AREA.


WE ARE  NON GOVERNMENTAL ORGANISATION , WE  INNUGURATE OUR FUNDATION
PROGRAME TO HELP THE DISASTER VICTIMS  AND  THE FAMILY.IN SOME DISASTER
IN
AFRICA MOSTLY THE PLANE CRASH THAT  HAPPEND IN NIGERIA TWICE TOOK MANY
LIVES
AND ALSO DISTROYED  SOME HOME.. MOTHER AND FATHER ALL DEAD  NOBODY TO
TAKE
CARE OF THE KIDS, ALSO SOME SISTERS AND BROTHERS ALL DEAD ,ALSO SOME
THE
YOUNG KIDS ALL DIED GOING HOME FROM THERE SCHOOL VACATION THIS ARE ALL
SAD
MEMORIES ONE CAN NEVER IMMAGINE,THAT IS WHY WE HAVE  COME OUT WITH THIS
PROGRAME  (CAMPAIGN   FOR  DISASTER  VICTIMS  FOUNDATION) TO HELP AND
FACILITATE THE VICTIMS AND THE FAMILY.
OUR AIMS ARE AS FOLLOWS:

1,RESCUE AND  SURVIVING THE  DISASTER  VICTIMS.

2,CAMPAIGN FOR VICTIM IN BOTH HOME COUNTRY AND OUTSIDE

3,AWEARNESS AND INFROMATION

4,FUNDING  AND REHABILITATION

5,SPONSORS  AND CONTRIBUTORS.

6.VOTE OF THANKS AND RECOGNITION FOR SPONSORS AND CONTRIBUTORS.

NOTE: TO MAKE ALL THIS WORK OUT FOR HUMANITY  WE NEED SOME SUPPORT
AROUND
THE WORLD ..WE NEED SPONSORS AND CONTRIBUTORS TO MAKE  THIS DREAM AND
FOUNDATION KEEP GOING AND SAVAGE THE DISASTER VICTIMS AT ALL TIME. WE
RELY
ON YOUR CONTRIBUTION FOR THE BETTERMENT OF HUMANITY. WE SHALL REALLY
APPRECIATE YOUR SUPPORT FOR   LESS PREVILEGE DISASTER VICTIMS.YOU CAN
SEND
US YOUR MEANS OF SUPPORT  IN ANY WAY  IN YOUR CAPACITY.
WE SHALL HIGHLY APPRECIATE ANY FORM OF COUNTRIBUTION  OR SPONSOR YOU
ARE
ABLE TO ASIST THE  DISASTER VICTIM.WE SHALL  BE EXPECTING YOUR REPLY ( GOD
BLESS YOU).
           SIGN...............................MISS LAURA SMITH

_________
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Nigeria jet crash leaves 103 dead Some 75 schoolchildren are feared to be among 103 people thought to have died on a plane that crashed in Nigeria. Seven survivors are said to have escaped the burning wreckage of the plane, which crashed at Port Harcourt. The plane was bringing passengers from the capital Abuja on Saturday when it overshot the runway during an electrical storm and burst into flames. "I saw the plane break into three and then fire engulfed it and it started burning," an airport worker said. Workers described charred bodies and pieces of the wrecked plane strewn around the disaster site. Lightning The DC-9, owned by the private Sosoliso Airlines, was carrying 75 school children, aged 12-16, home for the Christmas holidays, staff at the Loyola Jesuit school in Abuja said. The cause of the crash is not known, but civil aviation spokesman Samuel Adurogboye said the aircraft "ran into bad weather". Witnesses described flashes of lightning as the plane came into land. NIGERIA PLANE CRASHES October 2005: Bellview Airlines plane crashes near the village of Lissa, Ogun state, killing 117 people May 2002: Plane operated by EAS Airlines crashes in Kano, killing 148 people - half of them on the ground November 1996: 142 people die when Boeing 727 owned by Nigeria's ADC airline plunges into lagoon 85km (55 miles) from Lagos September 1992: 158 people are killed when military transport plane goes down near Lagos Air disasters timeline "Almost everyone was killed. There was a lot of flames," an airport official said. "There were many students onboard, returning for the holidays." Mr Adurogboye said seven people were rescued. "They were breathing and were taken to hospital. They are responding to treatment," he said. He did not say if they were passengers or crew members. Safety concerns A Boeing 737 aircraft crashed in October shortly after take-off from the commercial capital Lagos, killing all 117 people on board. The flight recorders from that plane were never found. President Olusegun Obasanjo had instructed his aviation minister to plug any loopholes to ensure airline safety. After the latest disaster, Femi Fani-Kayode, a spokesman for Mr Obasanjo, said: "It is a national tragedy for us. We need to take all the necessary measures to make sure this sort of thing stops happening." Asked whether this raised questions about air safety in Nigeria, he said: "Of course, people would be concerned, in view of the circumstances." Correspondents say Nigeria's aviation industry has grown rapidly in recent years, but many aircraft are elderly and there have been several fatal crashes. However, Sosoliso was regarded as one of the safer domestic Nigerian airlines.

Nigeria plane crash kills 103 * * Email * Print * Normal font * Large font December 11, 2005 - 8:10PM Page 1 of 2 AdvertisementAdvertisement Relatives of some of the 103 people killed in a plane crash in Nigeria on Saturday crowded hospital mortuaries seeking the bodies of their loved ones on Sunday morning. The Sosoliso Airlines flight on its way from the capital Abuja to the southern oil city of Port Harcourt crashed during a storm and burst into flames at the airport, killing all but seven of the people on board. More than 50 of the people on board were schoolchildren from a Catholic college in Abuja on their way home for the Christmas break, according to the Abuja archbishop's secretary. Also among the people who died in the crash were a Frenchman and an American woman working for the relief organisation Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF), the head of mission for MSF France in Nigeria said. At the University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital, about 20 badly burnt bodies were laid out on the dirt floor of the mortuary, a room with no refrigeration or air-conditioning. Hospital staff sprinkled disinfectant on the bodies, most of whom were recognisable, and tagged them with numbers. "I am angry. I have been here since 6am. All I want is to take the body of my elder sister. Give her to me," cried one woman among hundreds who were pleading to take bodies away. Many were clutching photographs of their dead relatives. Hospital authorities said they could not release any bodies until full identification had been carried out, and five armed police were stationed at the door of the mortuary. One of the survivors, a woman, was being treated in a ward in the same hospital. Most of her body was covered in bandages and her face looked badly burnt. On Saturday, confusing reports emerged about what exactly happened to the DC9 aircraft as it was trying to land. Civil aviation officials said it missed the runway, but witnesses said they saw it land on the tarmac and break into pieces. "I was at the helipad when the plane came in ... there was thunder ... I saw the plane break into three and then fire engulfed it and it started burning," said an unnamed airport worker. Officials said 60 bodies were recovered in daylight hours. A dozen ambulances sped up and down the runway, taking dead bodies covered in sheets to hospitals and mortuaries. Police stopped reporters from getting close to the wreckage. "It's another national tragedy," Information Minister Frank Nweke said on state television. There was no official word on the cause of the crash.

117 killed in Nigeria plane crash Sunday, October 23, 2005 Posted: 2220 GMT (0620 HKT) story.nigeriacrsh.jpg First images from the site showed debris strewn over a wide area. Image: RELATED . Map: Crash site . A chronology of disasters in Nigeria . Obasanjo's wife dies in hospital YOUR E-MAIL ALERTS Nigeria The Boeing Company Air Transportation Disasters and Accidents or Create Your Own Manage Alerts | What Is This? LAGOS, Nigeria (CNN) -- All 117 people aboard a passenger jet that crashed shortly after take-off from Lagos are dead, including several high-level Nigerian officials, the government said Sunday. The identities of the officials were not released, pending notification of relatives. "The Federal Government announces with regret the unfortunate air crash of Bellview Airlines ... which resulted in the loss of life of all passengers and crew on board," a government statement released late on Sunday said, according to Reuters news service. Dismembered and burned body parts, fuselage fragments and engine parts were strewn over an area the size of a football field near the village of Lissa, about 30 km (20 miles) north of Lagos. "The aircraft has crashed and it is a total loss. We can't even see a whole human body," Reuters reports a senior police official at the scene as saying. Video from the crash site showed smoldering wreckage scattered over a rocky hillside. A Red Cross official at the site said there was a 70 foot (20 meter) crater where the main impact occurred, Reuters said. There were 111 passengers and six crew members on board, according to Bellview Airlines. The plane was headed to the Nigerian capital of Abuja when it crashed, officials said. The cause of the crash was being investigated. The pilot of Bellview Airlines Flight 210 pilot issued a distress call just before the control tower lost sight of the plane, about three minutes after takeoff, officials said. The plane was missing for hours before the wreckage was found shortly after dawn. The Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria scrambled two helicopters to search for the jet. Relatives of those on board also chartered a helicopter, and search teams were dispatched. The twin-engine Boeing 737 left Murtala Muhammed Airport in Lagos at 7 p.m. (6 p.m. GMT) Saturday as Flight 210 en route to Abuja -- a trip that should have taken about 50 minutes. Several high-level Nigerian officials were believed to be on board the privately owned jet, the office of President Olusegun Obasanjo told CNN. They were headed to Abuja for a meeting. Reuters said the plane was believed to be carrying a U.S. consular official and some European passengers as well. Bellview is a Nigerian airline popular with expatriates living in the West African nation and has been operating for about 10 years with no record of any incidents. A storm was passing through Lagos, Nigeria's commercial capital, about the time the flight left, CNN's Africa Correspondent Jeff Koinange reported. There were widespread rains and thunderstorms around the southwestern corner of Nigeria, particularly near Lagos to Ibadan, CNN's meteorologist Mari Ramos said. The normally bustling airport in Lagos was quiet Sunday with family members of passengers waiting for news of rescue efforts. President Obasanjo called on the country's people to pray for the passengers and their families, officials said. Obasanjo's office said in a statement that the president was personally overseeing search and rescue operations. Meanwhile, Obasanjo's wife, Stella Obasanjo, died Sunday at a hospital in Spain, officials said. She had traveled to Spain to undergo surgery and died from complications resulting from that surgery.

 

I suggest that you instead support disaster victims through Red Cross or another wellknown organisation.
 

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