United Nations peacekeepers have warned the international community that Haiti’s capital could quickly descend into rioting if three million hungry, thirsty and traumatised earthquake survivors don’t receive emergency aid soon. The warning came as relief agencies battled to deliver tonnes of material to Haiti’s capital despite blocked roads, a clogged airport and shattered ports.
Looters have emptied food shops and scuffles have broken out among survivors fighting over scarce water as the wait for help drags on. Brazil’s Defence Minister, Nelson Jobim, warned that the Brazilian-led peacekeeping force could struggle if desperation spilled into violence. “We are worried about security,” he said.
“As long as the people are hungry and thirsty, as long as we haven’t fixed the problem of shelter, we run the risk of riots.” As the UN launched a flash appeal for US $560 million US President Barack Obama warned of “difficult days” ahead overcoming the logistical challenge of reaching the needy.
The UN Secretary-General Ban Ki Moon said that food and water were in critically short supply as hundreds of thousands began their fifth night sleeping out in the open.
“Logistics are extremely difficult. The airport is open, but capacity is limited. A lack of transport and fuel is also hampering efforts. Many roads remain blocked,” Ban Ki Moon said.
“That said, the international community’s response has been generous and robust, and we are gearing up rapidly and effectively despite the challenging circumstances.”
As almost a week is about to lapse since the 7.1 tremor raised Port-au-Prince to the ground, the UN called on countries to stop sending rescuers, a grim acknowledgement of the diminishing hope of finding survivors.
The focus now is to getting in emergency supplies to keep those who have already been rescued alive.
“We don’t need more disaster search-and-rescue teams,” said Elisabeth Byrs, the UN’s humanitarian spokeswoman. “That would only clog the airport.”
The United States has effectively took control of the vast relief operation as six naval vessels — including an aircraft carrier that has started to serve as a “floating airport” — and 10,000 troops headed towards the country.
President Préval of Haiti sobbed with gratitude over the phone with President Obama, who managed to reach him after three days of failed calls.
He ended with a message to the American people, saying: “From the bottom of my heart, and on behalf of the Haitian people, thank you, thank you, thank you.”
In a rare thaw in relations, Cuba agreed to allow US military aircraft into its airspace to evacuate the wounded to Miami.
The concession shaves 90 minutes off the flight time from Guantánamo Bay, where casualties will receive initial treatment, to Miami where they can be taken to hospital. The only casualties to reach hospital in Miami so far, however, were 20 American citizens.
In Port-au-Prince, Stefano Zannini, the head of mission for Médecins sans Frontières, said his staff had been working around the clock under canvas to perform life-saving surgery on hundreds of people with dangerous open fractures. Thousands more were still awaiting help, and at least 100 had died before their wounds could be tended. “People are still coming to our structures by any way they can, in cars, on motorbikes, even being carried on doors used as stretchers,” he said. “We have thousands ready for surgical interventions.”
With the city’s tiny airport overwhelmed, aid organisations were struggling to find alternative routes to bring in vital medical supplies. Lorries bearing tarpaulins, high-energy food, water and medical supplies were beginning to reach the city by road yesterday after being flown into the Dominican Republic. With Port-au-Prince’s commercial docks destroyed by the quake, hopes of bringing sea cargo rest on the tiny northern port of Cap Haïtien — the only means by which to bring in the quantities of food required by hungry survivors.
There was relief, however, at the discovery that a badly damaged UN food warehouse had not been looted as previously believed, allowing workers to retrieve 6,000 tons of food supplies to begin distributing at first light.
Meanwhile, hundreds if not thousands of corpses still lay rotting in the sun along the streets, causing a toxic stench.
Hundreds of listless men, women and children, on filthy mats and bloodstained sheets, still lay in the heat with broken limbs, beset by flies, still untreated since Tuesday’s catastrophic earthquake.
In the streets of central Port-au-Prince, people scrambled with bare hands at the concrete and rubble that had once been their homes, some just to retrieve loved ones they knew were dead. There was not an aid truck or an ambulance in sight.
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