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AccessibilityText size: This site uses the Open Source Content Management System Plone and has been designed to be completely accessible and usable, working in accordance with the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG v1.0). If there is anything on this site — accessibility or validation related — that is not according to the standard, please contact the Site Administration, and not the Plone Team. Access keysAccess keys are a navigation device enabling you to get around this web site using your keyboard. Available access keysThis site uses a setup that closely matches most international recommendations on access keys. These are:
Using access keys in different web browsers
Accessibility StatementWe have undertaken to use our knowledge and understanding of the ways in which different people access the Internet, to develop a web site that is clear and simple for everybody to use. ValidationWe have used XHTML 1.0 and CSS that conforms to specification, as laid out by the W3C because we believe that usability and accessibility must have a solid foundation. If anything on this web site does not validate correctly, please contact the Site Administration, and not the Plone Team. We have also endeavoured to achieve AA accessibility as measured against version 1.0 of the WCAG. We are aware however, that a number of the checkpoints of the WCAG are subjective — and although we are sure that we have met them squarely, there may be instances where interpretation may vary. |
HIGHLIGHTSOur Teams on the GroundRecently we put together a special edition focusing on the Haiti emergency and the WFP teams remarkable efforts. It contained stories about the different areas we work in - Aviation, shipping etc.. giving lots of facts and figures about how much food we have moved, how many aircraft we have moblised etc.. Source: WFP Logistics BlogThe Men Of The Logistics Emergency Teams (LET)Source: WFP Logistics Blog FROM THE FIELD: "Update from Santo Domingo -- the 2nd Wave"It seems "the first wave emergency response" for the Haiti earthquake is over. Two weeks after the disaster, the first-responders who flew in to Haiti will slowly start to demobilize, to be replaced by new staff to stay for the next months. READ MORE HERE... Source: The Road to the Horizon Ninety Minutes Over HispaniolaHAITI EARTHQUAKEPhotos Of WFP Logistic's UNHAS Evacuating Wounded On First Flight Out Of Port-Au-Prince, Haiti Source: Logistics Blog Latest Photos Of Damaged Port In Port-au-Prince, Haiti Source: Logistics Blog
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