PORT-AU-PRINCE, Jan 13 – A major earthquake rocked Haiti, killing possibly thousands of people as it toppled the presidential palace and hillside shanties alike and leaving the poor Caribbean nation appealing for international help.
A five-story UN building was also brought down on Tuesday by the 7.0 magnitude quake, the most powerful to hit Haiti in more than 200 years according to the US Geological Survey.
Reuters television footage from the capital, Port-au-Prince, showed scenes of chaos on the streets with people sobbing and appearing dazed amid the rubble. It prompted a tsunami watch for parts the Caribbean, the Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre said yesterday. “Everything started shaking, people were screaming, houses started collapsing ... it’s total chaos,” Reuters reporter Joseph Guyler Delva said. “I saw people under the rubble, and people killed,” he added. The quake’s epicentre was only 16km from Port-au-Prince, which has a population of about one million, and aftershocks as powerful as 5.9 rattled the city throughout the night and into Wednesday. Reports on casualties and damage were slow to get out of Haiti due to communication problems.
US President Barack Obama said his “thoughts and prayers” were with the people of Haiti and pledged immediate aid. A late-night White House meeting involving various arms of the government was held to co-ordinate the US response. The Inter-American Development Bank said it would provide $200,000 in immediate emergency aid. The World Bank, which said its local offices were destroyed but that most staff were accounted for, plans to send a team to help Haiti assess damage and plan a recovery. The US Coast Guard in Miami said it had mobilized cutters and aircraft to positions close to Haiti to give humanitarian assistance as needed.
The quake hit at 5pm (2200 GMT), and witnesses reported people screaming “Jesus, Jesus” running into the streets as offices, hotels, houses and shops collapsed. Experts said the quake’s epicentre was very shallow at a depth of only 10km, which was likely to have magnified the destruction. The presidential palace lay in ruins, its domes fallen on top of flattened walls. CNN reported on its website that Haitian Ambassador Joseph said President Rene Preval was safe, but gave no further details. Bloodied and dazed survivors gathered in the open and corpses were pinned by debris.
The United Nations said a large number of its personnel in Haiti were unaccounted for after a five-story building at the headquarters of the UN mission collapsed. “The whole city is in darkness. You have thousands of people sitting in the streets with nowhere to go,” said Rachmani Domersant, an operations manager with the Food for the
Poor charity. “There are people running, crying, screaming.”
LITTLE HELP FOR VICTIMS
In the hillside neighbourhood of Petionville, Domersant said he saw no police or rescue vehicles. “People are trying to dig victims out with flashlights,” he said. “I think hundreds of casualties would be a serious understatement.” Witnesses said they saw homes and shanties built on hillsides come tumbling down as the earth shook. “The car was bouncing off the ground,” Domersant said. UN officials said normal communications had been cut off and the only way to talk with people on the ground was via satellite phone. Roads were blocked by rubble. UN peacekeeping chief Alain Le Roy said the main UN building in Port-au-Prince had collapsed. “We don’t know how many people were in the building,” he told reporters. Some 9,000 UN police and troops are stationed there to maintain order. Le Roy’s deputy Edmond Mulet said 200 to 250 people worked in the building during normal hours. There were more houses destroyed than standing in Delmas Road, a major thoroughfare in Port-au-Prince, another Food for the Poor employee said. The Hotel Montana, where many foreigners stay, was also damaged. – Reuters
No comments:
Post a Comment