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Aftershock terrifies desperate Haitians anew

Wed Jan 20, 2010 12:44 PM EST
world-news, haiti, earthquake, cb
Paul Haven, Associated Press
< PreviousNext >
showing 1 of 34 photos
<p>Haitians line the banks of the main wharf hoping to get a ride in any one of many small boats for hire in Port-au- Prince, Haiti, Tuesday, Jan. 19, 2010. With the city left in ruins after last week's deadly earthquake, many of the displaced people are leaving town and traveling to stay with relatives in outlying towns. (AP Photo/Julie Jacobson)</p>

Haitians line the banks of the main wharf hoping to get a ride in any one of many small boats for hire in Port-au- Prince, Haiti, Tuesday, Jan. 19, 2010. With the city left in ruins after last week's deadly earthquake, many of the displaced people are leaving town and traveling to stay with relatives in outlying towns. (AP Photo/Julie Jacobson)

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PORT-AU-PRINCE — A frightening new aftershock Wednesday forced more earthquake survivors to live on the capital's streets or sent them fleeing to perhaps even worse conditions in the countryside.

A flotilla of rescue vessels, meanwhile, led by the U.S. hospital ship Comfort, converged on the capital. They are helping fill gaps in still lagging global efforts to bring water, food and medical help to hundreds of thousands of people who are surviving in makeshift tents or simply on blankets or plastic sheets under the tropical sun.

The strongest tremor since Haiti's cataclysmic Jan. 12 earthquake struck at 6:03 a.m., just before sunrise while many were still sleeping. From the teeming plaza near the collapsed presidential palace to a hillside tent city, the 5.9-magnitude aftershock lasted only seconds but panicked thousands of Haitians.

"Jesus!" they cried as rubble tumbled and dust rose anew from government buildings around the plaza. Parents gathered up children and ran.

Up in the hills, where U.S. troops were helping thousands of homeless, people bolted screaming from their tents. Jajoute Ricardo, 24, came running from his house, fearing its collapse.

"Nobody will go to their house now," he said, as he sought a tent of his own. "It is chaos, for real."

A slow vibration intensified into side-to-side shaking that lasted about eight seconds — compared to last week's far stronger initial quake that seemed to go on for 30 seconds.

Throngs again sought out small, ramshackle "tap-tap" buses to take them away from the city. On Port-au-Prince's beaches, more than 20,000 people looked for boats to carry them down the coast, the local Signal FM radio reported.

But the desperation may actually be deeper outside the capital, closer to last week's quake epicenter.

"We're waiting for food, for water, for anything," Emmanuel Doris-Cherie, 32, said in Leogane, 25 miles (40 kilometers) southwest of Port-au-Prince. Homeless in Leogane lived under sheets draped across tree branches, and the damaged hospital "lacks everything," Red Cross surgeon Hassan Nasreddine said.

Hundreds of Canadian soldiers and sailors were deploying to that town and to Jacmel on the south coast to support relief efforts, and the Haitian government sent a plane and an overland team to assess needs in Petit-Goave, a seaside town 10 miles (15 kilometers) farther west from Leogane that was the epicenter of Wednesday's aftershock.

The death toll was estimated at 200,000, according to Haitian government figures relayed by the European Commission, with 80,000 buried in mass graves. The commission raised its estimate of homeless to 2 million, from 1.5 million, and said 250,000 people needed urgent aid.

Many badly injured Haitians still awaited lifesaving surgery.

"It is like working in a war situation," said Rosa Crestani of Doctors Without Borders at the Choscal Hospital. "We don't have any morphine to manage pain for our patients."

The damaged hospitals and emergency medical centers set up in Port-au-Prince needed surgeons, fuel for generators, oxygen and countless other kinds of medical supplies, aid groups said.

Dr. Evan Lyon, of the U.S.-based Partners in Health, messaged from the central University Hospital that the facility was within 24 hours of running out of key supplies. Wednesday's aftershock was yet another blow: Surgical teams and patients were forced to evacuate temporarily.

Troops of the 82nd Airborne Division were providing security at the hospital. A helicopter landing pad was designated nearby for airlifting the most critical patients to the U.S. Navy hospital ship Comfort.

The great white ship, 894 feet (272 meters) long, with a medical staff of 550, was anchored in Port-au-Prince harbor and had taken aboard its first two surgical patients by helicopter late Tuesday even as it was steaming in.

It joined the aircraft carrier Carl Vinson and other U.S. warships offshore, along with the French landing craft Francis Garnier, which carried a medical team, hundreds of tents and other aid.

The seaborne rescue fleet will soon be reinforced by the Spanish ship Castilla, with 50 doctors and 450 troops, and by three other U.S.-based Navy vessels diverted from a scheduled Middle East mission. Canadian warships were already in Haitian waters, and an Italian aircraft carrier, the Cavour, also will join the flotilla with medical teams and engineers.

U.N. humanitarian chief John Holmes said at U.N. headquarters in New York that it's believed that 3 million people are affected, with 2 million of those needing food for at least six months.

At the hillside tent camp, set up on a golf course where an 82nd Airborne unit has its base, the lines of hungry and thirsty stretched downhill and out of sight as paratroopers handed out bottled water and ready-to-eat meals as fast as helicopters brought them in.

In one sign of normality, women were seen carrying baskets of cauliflower, sweet potatoes and sugar cane into the city from farms in the hills. Some food and water was on sale in Port-au-Prince's markets, but prices had skyrocketed.

"We need money, man. I don't have enough to buy anything," said a newly homeless man who gave his name as Ricardo, who was seeking work, food and shelter.

Looking over the golf course scene, 82nd Airborne Capt. John Hartsock said, "This is the first time I've seen it this orderly."

President Rene Preval stressed the relative quiet prevailing over much of Port-au-Prince. People understand, he told French radio, "it is through calmness (and) an even more organized solidarity that we're going to get out of this."

Concerns still persisted that looting and violence that flared up in pockets in recent days could spread. The European Commission's report described the security situation as "deteriorating."

But U.S. troops — some 11,500 soldiers, Marines and sailors onshore and offshore as of Wednesday and expected to total 16,000 by the weekend — could be seen slowly ratcheting up control over parts of the city. The U.N. was adding 2,000 peacekeepers to the 7,000 already in Haiti, and 1,500 more police to the 2,100-member international force.

Other small signs of normalcy rippled over Port-au-Prince: Street vendors had found flowers to sell to those wishing to honor their dead. One or two money transfer agencies had reopened to receive wired money from Haitians abroad. Officials said banks would open later this week.

But Wednesday's aftershock, the stench of the lingering dead, and the tears and upstretched hands of helpless Haitians made clear that the country's tragedy will continue for months and years as this poor land counts and remembers its losses.

After the tremor's dust settled, street merchant Marie-Jose Decosse walked past the partly collapsed St. Francois de Salles Hospital in Carrefour Feuille, one of the worst-hit sections of town. She raised her arms to the sky, and spoke for millions.

"Lord have mercy, for we are sinners! Please have mercy on Haiti," she shouted.

___

Associated Press writers contributing to this report included Alfred de Montesquiou, Tamara Lush, Kevin Maurer, Michelle Faul and Bill Gorman in Haiti; Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations; Emma Vandore and Elaine Ganley in Paris, and Aoife White in Brussels.

© 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Paul Haven's Column, All of Newsvine
  • Groups: dolovewalk.org, Haitian Life
  • Regions: United States , Haiti
  • Public Discussion (31)
GOP Rules

That has to be horrifying to be in the middle of that. The buildings that remain have to be pretty structurally weak and ready to collapse at any time. It has to feel like the end of the world for those poor people.

  • 2 votes
Reply#1 - Wed Jan 20, 2010 1:40 PM EST
davidC123

How much more can these poor people take!

  • 1 vote
#1.1 - Wed Jan 20, 2010 5:07 PM EST
take2la

#3

    #1.2 - Wed Jan 20, 2010 6:59 PM EST
    krishna-167929

    FYI-- New NV group Haitian Life:

    This group is for seeds and discussions regarding issues related to Haiti. Let's talk about the people, the earthquake, the land, politics and more.

    • 2 votes
    #1.3 - Thu Jan 21, 2010 8:02 PM EST
    Reply
    California Militia

    Seems to me that every disaster goes exactly the same way. Disaster strikes. People need help. International community sends aid. Always tons of roadblocks in establishing aid distribution points. People always seem to be where aid cant go, and cant go where aid is.

    Is it me or are there just not enough helicopters in the world?

      Reply#2 - Wed Jan 20, 2010 1:50 PM EST
      Midwestlady

      Truly a horrible tragedy. Help is trying to get there, and is there. The stories coming out of there is just heart-breaking.

      • 2 votes
      Reply#3 - Wed Jan 20, 2010 2:10 PM EST
      servus_aus_tex

      I wonder if the fault line keeps moving in they are just going to have to abandon that piece of land. Boy, what a mess relocating all those people would be.

      There used to be a port in Texas called Indianola/Carlshaven, and it was THE big port in Texas, bigger than Galveston. It was a bustling place. But it kept getting hit by hurricanes. After the first one they builit a seawall which protected them for a while but eventually a really big hurricane came and basically washed the majority of the city out to sea.

      Now all that remains is a historical marker. The relatively few survivors simply picked up and moved elsewhere.

      Of course I realized there are millions in Haiti so that many people just picking up and moving would be very problematic, not only for themselves but for those countries/neighbors who would have to deal with them wherever they show up.

      Can you imagine the state of the world if all the fault lines around the world start similary moving like they are in Haiti?

      • 1 vote
      Reply#4 - Wed Jan 20, 2010 2:18 PM EST
      politicalcenter

      Surely, you know that all of them have a welcome home in the US.

      • 1 vote
      #4.1 - Wed Jan 20, 2010 2:26 PM EST
      servus_aus_tex

      Your sarcasm is noted. lol

      • 2 votes
      #4.2 - Wed Jan 20, 2010 2:34 PM EST
      goldminor

      I noticed a statement in an article that said that the country of Senegal offered to take Haitians for resettlement. It sounded like the offer has been in place for awhile. Not sure when it was initially made, but this might be a good time to take them up on the offer. The offer included giving each person a piece of land. If a significant portion of Haitians were willing to emigrate, around 25% or higher, it would become much easier to help the remainder. All the goodwill in the world, isn't going to solve the problems endemic to Haiti.

      • 1 vote
      #4.3 - Wed Jan 20, 2010 3:15 PM EST
      Reply
      GoldenGateMami_Susi

      I live in Florida.....they're all going to land here. SFL is preparing up here we're preparing.

      Tragic state of affairs and that country will take generations to recover if at all.

      • 2 votes
      Reply#5 - Wed Jan 20, 2010 3:23 PM EST
      diversity

      I wonder why of all the Caribbean region, the most lawless, disease infested, impoverished country like Haiti gets the worst disaster. That place must be like an island prison right now for those people.

      • 2 votes
      Reply#6 - Wed Jan 20, 2010 3:56 PM EST
      mountainmike-1199289

      Video coming out of Haiti has reminded me of Mogadishu and Africa. Supplies being handed out around armed men with people grabbing and running in desperation looks like countless scenes in Africa. This follows the video of front loaders pushing rubble and bodies into land fill pits.

      I just saw the Pat Robertson voodoo doll on sale at eBay that will donate money to Haiti.

      • 2 votes
      Reply#7 - Wed Jan 20, 2010 4:11 PM EST
      Stevie McMichael

      I just saw the Pat Robertson voodoo doll on sale at eBay that will donate money to Haiti.

      That just made me almost spit root beer all over my monitor. :D

      • 1 vote
      #7.1 - Wed Jan 20, 2010 6:14 PM EST
      Reply
      cellan

      I don't know why you all are speaking as if such disasters can only happen somewhere else. It happened here in the form of a hurricane. You've forgotten Katrina already? The only difference between Hurricane Katrina and the earthquake in Haiti is the magnitude of the devastation and the number of people killed, injured and now homeless. Hundreds died and thousands were displaced in Katrina. Aid was sorely slow in getting to them, there was lawlessness, and it has taken years for that state to recover. In fact, it hasn't fully recovered. I just don't think it's possible to be adequately prepared to handle such an epic disaster involving millions of people.

      • 2 votes
      Reply#8 - Wed Jan 20, 2010 4:29 PM EST
      diversity

      I don't think anyone is weighing out Katrina, yes that was poorly handled by our own government and hardly forgotten. I think to avoid the same criticism that Bush received and well deserved, that Obama is taking quicker action to help Haiti. But as you post the devasation and number of people killed are far more disastrous than Katrina, even though next to 9/11 that had to have been one of this country's worst hurricanes in history. But Haiti faces much worse things to come as a result of this quake with the lack of resources and money, than to say this was to happen in the U.S. or another nation with more resources.

      • 2 votes
      #8.1 - Wed Jan 20, 2010 5:31 PM EST
      Reply
      judi fermanich

      The overwhelming sadness everyone feels at the moment is normal for us but we must use our knowledge of this tragedy, to extend the help window beyond these first couple of weeks. Remember that these incredibly poor people are in it for the long haul. It would be best if we figure, quickly, how to do that.

      Heartbreak aside, the number of orphans, families broken, and ruined business' will require months, if not years of help. After Katrina, how many returned? How many have completely relocated, which these many people cannot do in Haiti? And Louisiana is far from healed. We all know that.

      What is next and who do we contact to extend the aid beyond these first weeks?I surely do not know, at the moment.

      • 1 vote
      Reply#9 - Wed Jan 20, 2010 4:30 PM EST
      AMphoto

      It is overwhelmingly upsetting. I always ask why things like this happen to the most impoverished people. Obviously there is no answer. Every time I think of all the babies and children I break down. I truly hope for the best for these people.

      • 1 vote
      Reply#10 - Wed Jan 20, 2010 4:41 PM EST
      Richard H. Pratt

      Haiti sits at the junction of two large tectonic plates. It was inevitable, that a series of shocks would occur. Its sad for that part of the world, as resources are scarce.

      • 1 vote
      Reply#11 - Wed Jan 20, 2010 4:46 PM EST
      CHRIS MILLER-490054

      I donated by texting haiti to the 9 number. We , Americans have so much. I work in retail and I see people buying 800.00 to 2500.00 plamsa TVs ,every day, even in this economy. So, we have no excuse, NOT to help. Even 10.00 as I did, this is what I can afford, so this is how I helped.

      The comments people have made about the some Haitians looting and grabbing for food. What would YOU DO,if your kids were starving ? Hell, Ive seen people turn nasty over a place in line , at Best Buy, over a freakin TV during Christmas shopping ! We have no right to say what the proper reaction should be .

      The morons like Pat Robertson and Rush Limbaugh should be taken down,by having their Shows cancelled. . They are racist, self-promoting, carnival barkers. What goes around comes around. They will get back the same amount of hate-they give out.

      In a way, the ignorant Robertson is half-right. If this Earthquake is any type of test or judgement from God, then its a test for the rest of the world-- for us. God is watching to see what type of reaction we have. How much we help, or how much we throw around words of hate ..

      I think Robertson and Limbaugh will have some explaining to do.

      • 4 votes
      Reply#12 - Wed Jan 20, 2010 5:57 PM EST
      bonos_rama

      "

      The comments people have made about the some Haitians looting and grabbing for food. What would YOU DO,if your kids were starving ? Hell, Ive seen people turn nasty over a place in line , at Best Buy, over a freakin TV during Christmas shopping ! We have no right to say what the proper reaction should be ."

      best comment on this that I've seen. We DO have to put it into perspective. Any parent that says they wouldn't "loot" or help themselves to food before it was actually handed out (it's going to make it into their hands anyway, right?) is a liar or a bad parent, period.

      • 2 votes
      #12.1 - Wed Jan 20, 2010 6:15 PM EST
      goldminor

      The thin veneer of civilization. In this country some would and some wouldn't. I would like to think that Americans would stay more to the side of law and order. Sort of like when the Titanic went down, most of the people did their best to work together for the common good, although there were examples to the contrary. Even in Haiti, you hear of groups of people sticking together to keep order as best they can. The young, mostly male looters remind me of the story, 'The Lord of the Flies', where in the absence of authority the savage comes out.

      • 1 vote
      #12.2 - Wed Jan 20, 2010 8:41 PM EST
      Reply
      CHRIS MILLER-490054

      Also, I think the goverment of Haiti should be ashamed--those people have lived in poverty, filth, poor housing.. for years. whats the excuse for that ? They have a beautiful country--the goverment should have developed tourism more. Like Jamaica did.

      so of course when a big natural disaster hits--they are waay behind, to begin with.

      • 1 vote
      Reply#13 - Wed Jan 20, 2010 6:01 PM EST
      xiingxingDeleted
      AlphaEco21

      First of all, this is a Sad, Sad story, but why are we sending news people and their camera crews, from every television station in America to Haiti? They're just consuming precious food and water. Just send the major networks in, so we have information on 'just how bad it is'. Then we can provide an appropriate response; unlike our response (or lack thereof) to Hurricane Katrina.

      President Obama: Why not spend some stimulus money to send 'our' unemployed, who have the appropriate skills, to help restore services and begin to rebuild Haiti?
      You could quickly organize a Peace Corp (by Executive Order) from our unemployed: civil engineers, surveyors, contractors, carpenters, stonemasons, etc. They could aid in building a new infrastructure and a new Haiti. Just as all Peace Corp workers do; teach the survivors to do these tasks for themselves, so they can take over, when the time is right.
      Out of this catastrophe and perhaps in the future; we will see a new economically stable and tourist-friendly Haiti emerge.

      • 2 votes
      Reply#15 - Wed Jan 20, 2010 7:06 PM EST
      Stevie McMichael

      You could quickly organize a Peace Corp (by Executive Order) from our unemployed: civil engineers, surveyors, contractors, carpenters, stonemasons, etc. They could aid in building a new infrastructure and a new Haiti.

      My mother was thinking the same thing--it could benefit everyone.

      • 3 votes
      #15.1 - Thu Jan 21, 2010 3:12 PM EST
      judi fermanich

      Mike, what a wonderful idea! We have enough time to do so and surely we have the personel for the job.

      What will it take to get something like that to fly and who to call?

      • 2 votes
      #15.2 - Fri Jan 22, 2010 12:49 PM EST
      judi fermanich

      Here is something else. If we go in as civilians, and we must; the construction should follow that which is done in California. With all the safeguards that could be implemented in hotels, and small business' and the one story homes that would be improvements over what they had, we have an opportunity to bypass the corruption of government in favor of really delivering the goods. Orphanages would truly be places of safety for the children and caregivers alike.

      Perhaps we have a chance to make life truly better for these impoverished human beings. I certainly hope so.

      • 2 votes
      #15.3 - Fri Jan 22, 2010 1:01 PM EST
      goldminor

      While that is a nice sentiment, the costs would be prohibitive most likely. I read someone,s idea that Haitians themselves should be the ones to do all the work, under the supervision of outside contractors. This makes a lot of sense, for the sense of personal responsibility plus the income it would generate for locals. This same person also talked about low cost construction techniques and materials that have been used elsewhere to accomplish similar needs.

      • 2 votes
      #15.4 - Fri Jan 22, 2010 5:13 PM EST
      AlphaEco21

      goldminor,

      This would be a twofold solution. First, employing Americans who are out of work. Next, teaching Haitians, how to do it for themselves.

      President Obama: Why not spend some stimulus money to send 'our' unemployed, who have the appropriate skills, to help restore services and begin to rebuild Haiti?
      You could quickly organize a Peace Corp (by Executive Order) from our unemployed: civil engineers, surveyors, contractors, carpenters, stonemasons, etc. They could aid in building a new infrastructure and a new Haiti. Just as all Peace Corp workers do; teach the survivors to do these tasks for themselves, so they can take over, when the time is right.

      Out of this catastrophe and perhaps in the future; we will see a new economically stable and tourist-friendly Haiti emerge.

      Have a nice day! Alpha

      • 3 votes
      #15.5 - Sat Jan 23, 2010 6:13 AM EST
      goldminor

      I see your point Alpha. Perhaps a mixture of both ideas would be more appropriate. There should be enough Haitians with reasonable skill level to work under the supervision of competent management from the US.

      • 2 votes
      #15.6 - Sat Jan 23, 2010 12:57 PM EST
      Reply
      huhahuhaDeleted
      take2la

      #3

      #15.1

      • 1 vote
      Reply#17 - Thu Jan 21, 2010 3:15 PM EST
      hulalaDeleted
      asidhfakjsdhfkaDeleted
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