Aid slowly reaching Haitians as desperation grows






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                                          This two photo combination shows above, in a May 20, 2004 file ...

AP
Wed Jan 13, 12:19 PM ET
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This two photo combination shows above, in a May 20, 2004 file photo provided by the Canadian Department of National Defence, the National Palace in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Below is the National Palace photographed Wednesday Jan. 13, 2010, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, one day after a powerful earthquake crushed thousands of structures, from schools and shacks to the National Palace and the U.N. peacekeeping headquarters. Untold numbers were still trapped. (Department of National Defence, Cpl. Matthew McGregor, above, Jorge Cruz, below)






Aid slowly reaching Haitians as desperation grows

 
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti – Pushed to the far edge of desperation, earthquake-ravaged Haitians dumped decaying bodies into mass graves and begged for water and food Friday amid fear that time is running out to avoid chaos and to rescue anyone still alive in the wreckage.

The U.S. military brought some relief, taking control of the airport, helping coordinate flights bringing in aid and evacuating foreigners and the injured. Medical teams, meanwhile, set up makeshift hospitals, workers started to clear the streets of corpses and water was being distributed in pockets of the city.

But the task was enormous.

Aid workers and authorities warned that unless they can quickly get aid to the people, Port-au-Prince will degenerate into lawlessness.

There were reports of isolated looting as young men walked through downtown with machetes, and robbers reportedly shot one man whose body was left on the street. Survivors also fought each other for food pulled from the debris.

"I'm getting the sense that if the situation doesn't get sorted (out) real soon, it will devolve into chaos," said Steve Matthews, a veteran relief worker with the Christian aid organization World Vision.

Time also was running out to rescue anyone who may still be trapped alive in the many buildings in Port-au-Prince that collapsed in Tuesday's magnitude-7.0 quake.

"Beyond three or four days without water, they'll be pretty ill," said Dr. Michael VanRooyen of the Harvard Humanitarian Initiative in Boston. "Around three days would be where you would see people start to succumb."

An Australian TV crew pulled a healthy 16-month-old girl from the wreckage of her house Friday — about 68 hours after the earthquake struck. In a collapsed house, neighbors and reporters heard a cry and found an air pocket: part of the top floor had been held up by a cabinet.

"I could see a dead body that was there, sort of on top of the cabinet; I could hear the baby on the left side of the body screaming," said David Celestino of the Dominican Republic, who had been working with the TV crew.

Although her parents were dead, Winnie Tilin survived with only scratches and soon was in the arms of her uncle, whose pregnant wife also was killed.

"I have to consider her like my baby because mine is passed," Frantz Tilin told The Associated Press.

As temperatures rose into the high 80s (upper 20s Celsius), the sickly smell of the dead lingered over Port-au-Prince, where countless bodies remained unclaimed in the streets. Hundreds of bloated corpses were stacked outside the city morgue, and limbs of the dead protruded from crushed schools and homes.

At a cemetery outside the city, trucks dumped bodies by the dozens into a mass grave. Elsewhere, people pulled a box filled with bodies along a road, then used a mechanical front-loader to lift the box and tip it into a large metal trash bin. South of the capital, workers burned more than 2,000 bodies in a trash dump.

The Red Cross estimates 45,000 to 50,000 people were killed. A third of Haiti's 9 million people may be in need of aid. As many as half of the buildings in the capital and other hard-hit areas were damaged or destroyed, according to the United Nations.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon
said the World Food Program was providing high-energy biscuits and ready-to-eat meals to around 8,000 people "several times a day."

"Obviously, that is only a drop in the bucket in the face of the massive need, but the agency will be scaling up to feed approximately 1 million people within 15 days and 2 million people within a month," he said.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said she would go to Haiti on Saturday to to inspect the damage and meet with President Rene Preval and other officials. Clinton, who will travel with USAID Administrator Dr. Rajiv Shah, said she wants to convey "our long-term, unwavering support, solidarity and sympathies."

"There are going to be many difficult days ahead," said President Barack Obama, speaking for the fourth time on the disaster in three days.

The effort to get aid to the victims has been stymied by blocked roads, congestion at the airport, limited equipment and other obstacles. U.N. peacekeepers patrolling the capital said popular anger was rising, warning aid convoys to add security to guard against looting.

"People who have not been eating or drinking for almost 50 hours and are already in a very poor situation — if they see a truck with something, or if they see a supermarket which has collapsed, they just rush to get something to eat," U.N. humanitarian spokeswoman Elisabeth Byrs said in Geneva.

Tom Osbeck, an Indiana missionary whose Protestant-run Jesus in Haiti Ministry operates a school north of Port-au-Prince, said nerves were becoming increasingly frayed.

"Even distributing food or water is very dangerous. People are desperate and will fight to death for a cup of water," Osbeck said.
Tempers flared at one of the capital's functioning gas stations as drivers tried to jockey their dusty cars into line. An armed guard brandishing a shotgun intervened to keep motorists from coming to blows.

Grocery stores were looted clean soon after the quake, according to Emilia Casella of the U.N. World Food Program. She said the WFP would start handing out 6,000 tons of food aid recovered from a damaged warehouse in the city's Cite Soleil slum and was preparing shipments of enough ready-to-eat meals to feed 2 million Haitians for a month.

Asked about the concern of frustration spilling into violence, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said his peacekeepers, working with Haitian police, "are now taking charge of law and order in the city."

"I suspect there will be some frustrations felt by the general population," he added. "We are very much concerned about that kind of possibility and are taking all possible precautionary measures. Until now, I think we have so far not seen major problems."

The U.S. military has several hundred personnel on the ground, including more than 100 troops from the U.S. 82nd Airborne Division. Hundreds of sailors, meanwhile, pulled into Port-au-Prince harbor on the aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson.

Within hours, an 82nd Airborne rapid response unit was handing out food, water and medical supplies from two cargo pallets outside the airport, a helicopter lifted off with water to distribute, and a reconnaissance chopper went searching for drop zones around the capital to move out more aid. Soldiers said they expected more supplies later in the day.

At the airport, foreigners waved their passports to guards as they scrambled to escape the chaos by boarding the departing flights.
"We've had people crying, people passing out," said Muriel Sinai, 38, a nurse from Orlando, Fla.

Some 250 Americans were flown to New Jersey's McGuire Air Force Base on three military planes. U.S. forces in control of the airport initially blocked French and Canadians from boarding planes, even though a French military aircraft stood by. They lifted their cordon after protests from French and Canadian officials.

The State Department said the U.S. death toll was six and predicted it will rise.

The Cuban government said Friday it had allowed U.S. airplanes to fly through its airspace as it evacuated wounded from Haiti, a move which shaves 90 minutes off flights to Miami.
With hospitals devastated, more than 3,000 injured have been treated in the Dominican Republic, including Haitian Senate President Kelly Bastien. A border hospital in Jimani is overflowing, while a trauma center in Santo Domingo requested blood donations to keep up with demand.

In Port-au-Prince, some 100 people have died while waiting for treatment at the offices of Doctors Without Borders, mission director Stefano Zannini said by phone. Open fractures are the most common injury, he said.

"I can see thousands of them walking in the streets, lost, asking for help, asking for everything," he said.

There was good news too: surgeons performed a complicated cesarean birth, Zannini said. "I am very proud to share with you that we were able to save both the lives of the baby and the mother."

An El Al Boeing 777 landed Friday with 250 Israeli medical officers and nurses ready to set up a military field hospital. A reconnaissance team set out to find a site for the 90-bed facility, which will have a full surgical unit and the capacity to treat 100 patients at a time.

In front of the collapsed National Palace, thousands of homeless in makeshift camps pleaded for help. Marimartha Syrel, a nurse, said nobody had provided even water since Tuesday. "We can't cook food. We can't do anything." The sidewalks were littered with excrement left on paper plates.

"They are very hungry," said Rivia Alce, a 21-year-old street vendor selling gum, cigarettes and rum. If no help comes, she said, "we will die."

Nearby, a woman with a bowl of water on the sidewalk bathed a naked girl without soap. Then she washed an elderly woman, naked but for a sagging pair of white panties.

A block away, a dozen bodies lay bloated and uncovered on the sidewalk — one of them with arms reaching out, as if begging for release.

Rubble spilling over from collapsed buildings blocked downtown traffic to all but pedestrians. People covered their faces with scarves to shield themselves from dust and the stench of decay. Small bands of young men and boys carrying machetes roamed the streets.

"They are scavenging everything. What can you do?" said 53-year-old Michel Legros, who was waiting for heavy equipment to excavate his house, where he added that seven relatives were buried. "I know some of them died."



___
Associated Press writers contributing to this story included Jonathan M. Katz, Paul Haven, Tamara Lush and Jennifer Kay in Port-au-Prince; Ramon Almanzar in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic; Bradley S. Klapper in Geneva; Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations; Danica Coto and David McFadden in San Juan, Puerto Rico.




Article: HERE





Redjeson Hausteen  

That moment of joy: Redjeson's face breaks into a smile as his mother Daphnee reaches out for him






Haiti earthquake: The hope and horror as boy, two, is found alive after 48 hours in the rubble
By David Williams
16th January 2010



For 48 frantic hours his parents had searched for their two-year-old son, digging with their bare hands among the twisted rubble of their collapsed home. They could hear his increasingly weak cries but simply could not shift the mangled concrete and metal that had trapped him somewhere below. Yesterday, however, came the joyous moment they had feared they would never see after the massive earthquake that struck Haiti on Tuesday, killing up to 50,000.



 
Redjeson Hausteen   Redjeson Hausteen Claude  
Redjeson Hausteen: The rescuer takes little Redjeson to his mother



This three-month-old child was found alive
Hope: This three-month-old child was found alive





Rescue workers, burrowing deep into the rubble, head torches picking out their route, edged their way successfully towards little Redjeson Claude. He was then passed along a human chain, his head scarred by dried blood and his face covered in minor wounds. He looked bewildered - until the moment he saw his mother Daphnee. Then, his eyes lit up and his face creased into a smile as she reached forward to cuddle him. For the international rescue teams operating in the heart of the broken Haiti capital Port-au-Prince, it was a moment of relief and achievement as they worked, often in wreckage containing bodies, in a race against time to find those still alive. At least 55 people had been rescued alive in the city by nightfall but aid agencies said that voices, including those of children, could still be heard calling from the debris. In one school, rescuers found two girls and a boy alive, while in a crumpled tower block they discovered a 60-year-old man, who had been in his fifth floor apartment when the earthquake, measuring seven on the Richter scale, hit. At the city's Hotel Montana, Spanish rescue teams pulled 65-year-old Sarlah Chand, a doctor, alive from the debris where she had been buried for more than 50 hours, fearing she would die where she lay. Remarkably, she had no broken bones. The hotel had 'folded' in seconds and she had plunged several feet before coming to rest in an area where plenty of air was able to flow through. Sitting up eating a biscuit while medics checked her, she said she had been trapped with five others and had been talking with them up until moment of rescue. All five were subsequently pulled clear, including an American.




Haiti earthquake
Despairing: Amid a scene of total devastation, one resident sits on a chair, his head in his hand






Rezene Tesfamariam, Haiti director of charity Plan International, said people were using their bare hands or basic tools such as shovels or pick-axes to try to reach loved ones. He said: 'There are people still alive underneath the rubble, you can hear them crying for help, but time is running out. 'It is beyond the means of individuals to reach them. They are trying to move concrete with their hands. What is desperately needed is proper machinery and equipment to lift the rubble.' Mr Tesfamariam, who lost his own home in the quake, added: 'I have seen refugees fleeing war and cyclones hitting villages, but in those cases at least you have time to run away. In just a few seconds so many lives were wiped out. Port-au-Prince looks like it has been bombed. 'I went back to my house and a neighbour called my name. She said there were children under the rubble. I shouted to them and they called back. As bodies block the streets, the survivors beg: Get aid to us now.
 
 
Desperate Haitians pleaded with international authorities yesterday to do more to get emergency aid to those who need it. Governments across the world are pouring relief supplies and medical teams into the Caribbean state - already the poorest in the Western Hemisphere. But the sheer scale of the destruction and logistical problems in distributing supplies has meant hundreds of thousands in the capital Port-au-Prince are without food, water or shelter. The earthquake badly damaged the city's seaport, allowing only limited use, while its airport has been forced to turn away aid planes because of a lack of space and fuel.






Port-au-Prince
Caught in the act: A Haitian policeman aims his rifle towards one of the looters who have been desperately scouring the city for food and drink
 
Haiti
Desperate: People queue for water on the streets of Port-au-Prince where resources are scarce



Bodies fill the front yard of the morgue in Port-au-Prince. Survivors have started using corpses as road blocks





Hilary Clinton to visit Haiti



U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said she would visit Haiti on Saturday with new USAID chief Rajiv Shah to get a firsthand look at the earthquake relief effort. 'I also have decided after consulting with President Obama and others in our government that I will be traveling to Haiti tomorrow with USAID administrator Dr. Raj Shah,' Clinton told a news briefing on Friday. 'We will be meeting President Preval and other members of the Haitian government along with the members of the U.S. government team on the ground,' Clinton said. The trip would also allow her to personally convey support to the people of Haiti, she said. Relief workers have also been unable to reach the most badly affected by truck because of debris on roads that were already inadequate before the quake hit. In two areas of the capital, groups of survivors stacked rotting corpses across main roads to protest about the lack of aid.
One man begged: 'We need food, water, doctors, medicine. We need it now - tomorrow is too late - we are thirsty now.'  However, hopes were raised last night after hundreds of U.S. troops - part of a 5,500-strong force promised by President Obama - arrived in Haiti.
 




 
An aerial view shows a ruined cathedral after Tuesday's earthquake. Troops and planeloads of food and medicine streamed into Haiti to aid a traumatised nation





 
James Girly, 64, of the US is brought out of a destroyed building of the Montana Hotel where he was trapped for 50 hours in Port-au-Prince





British search and rescue teams with sniffer dogs and heavy lifting equipment have also touched down, and spent much of yesterday combing the wreckage for survivors. But many Haitians - facing their fourth night of sleeping in the open air - are growing angry and desperate. Looters roamed downtown streets armed with machetes while others salvaged goods, including scraps of food, scavenged from the rubble. Michel Legros, 53, who was searching for several relatives under the concrete of his collapsed home, said: 'They are scavenging everything.'





Ann Barnes 





Jean Reynol, 37, a petrol station attendant, said that he feared it would not be long before the anger turned to violence. 'We're worried that people will get a little uneasy,' he added. 'People have not been eating or drinking for almost 50 hours and are already in a very poor situation.' Charity worker Fevil Dubien said fights had broken out over water he distributed from a truck in one of the city's northern neighbourhoods. And aid agencies hoping to distribute food supplies are also say that their efforts may need more security.
UN peacekeepers were patrolling Port-au-Prince last night to try to quell tensions. Its World Food Programme reported yesterday that its warehouses had been looted and said it did not know how much of its stockpile of 15,000 tons of aid remained. And it warned that hygiene could soon become a major problem as thousands of bodies are left to rot in the street. Hundreds of corpses were stacked outside the city morgue last night, while limbs of the dead protruded from the rubble of collapsed office buildings, schools and homes.
 




 
Survivors gathered around bodies in Haiti's capital Port-au-Prince photographed during a joint Red Cross Red Crescent/ECHO (European Community Humanitarian Organization) aerial assessment mission




 
People gather around a petrol pump seeking fuel. Petrol shortage is causing long queues and angry customers




Article: HERE 



 

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