Officials work to speed aid to Haitians
PORT-AU-PRINCE: With food, water and other aid flowing into Haiti in earnest, relief groups and officials are focused
on moving the supplies out of
the clogged airport and to
hungry, haggard earthquake survivors in the capital.
US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton was expected in Port-au-Prince today, to confer with President Rene Preval and US and international civilian and military officials on how best to help the recovery effort and Haitian government.
Clinton yesterday cited a “race against time” before anxiety
and anger create additional problems. Relief workers warned
that unless supplies are quickly
delivered, Port-au-Prince will
degenerate into lawlessness. The
US Southern Command said it now has 24 helicopters flying relief missions — many from warships
off the coast — with 4,200 military personnel involved and 6,300 more due by Monday. But there was still little sign of any aid in much of the city four days after the quake, and signs that the desperate — or the criminal - were taking things into their own hands. A water delivery truck driver said he was attacked in one of the city’s slums. 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.
“I don’t know how much longer we can hold out,” said Dee Leahy, a lay missionary from St Louis, Missouri, who was working with nuns handing out provisions from their small stockpile. “We need food, we need medical supplies, we need medicine, we need vitamins and we need painkillers. And we need it urgently.” The Red Cross estimates 45,000 to 50,000 people were killed in Tuesday’s magnitude-7.0 earthquake. While workers are burying some in mass graves, countless bodies remain unclaimed in the streets and the limbs of the dead protrude from crushed schools and homes.
“If the government still exists and the United Nations is around, I hope they can help us get the bodies out,” said Sherine Pierre, a 21-year-old communications student whose sister died when her house collapsed.
A third of Haiti’s 9 million people may be in need of aid. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said the World Food Programme 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.
US officials yesterday also
acknowledged the limits of their initial relief efforts, and promised
a quick ramp-up in delivery of
badly needed supplies. Dr Rajiv Shah, the White House’s coordinator of the US relief effort who was also expected to arrive today, indicated aid would begin flowing more freely in the next few days.
The effort to get aid to the victims has been stymied by blocked roads, congestion at the airport, limited equipment and other obstacles.