World pledges quake aid, Haitians still waiting

PORT-AU-PRINCE, (Reuters) – World leaders pledged  aid to rebuild a devastated Haiti, but on the streets of its  wrecked capital earthquake survivors were still waiting today for the basics: food, water and medicine.
Five days after a 7.0 magnitude quake killed up to 200,000  people, international rescue teams were still finding people  alive under the rubble of collapsed buildings in  Port-au-Prince.
Hundreds of thousands of hungry Haitians were desperately  waiting for help, but logistical logjams kept major relief from  reaching most victims, many of them sheltering in makeshift  camps on streets strewn with debris and decomposing bodies.
In the widespread absence of authority, looters swarmed  over collapsed stores on the city’s shattered main commercial  boulevard, carrying off T-shirts, bags, toys and anything else  they could find. Fighting broke out between groups of looters  carrying knives, ice-picks, hammers and rocks.
Many Haitians streamed out of the city on foot with  suitcases on their heads or jammed in cars to find food and  shelter in the countryside, and flee aftershocks and violence.
Many others crowded the airport hoping to get on planes  that left packed with Haitians.
President Barack Obama promised help as U.S. Secretary of  State Hillary Clinton flew yesterday to Haiti, where the  shell-shocked government gave the United States control over  the congested main airport to guide aid flights from around the  world.
“We’re moving forward with one of the largest relief  efforts in our history to save lives and deliver relief that  averts an even larger catastrophe,” said Obama, flanked at the  White House by predecessors George W. Bush and Bill Clinton,  who will lead a charity drive to help Haiti.
But on the streets of Port-au-Prince, where scarce police  patrols fired occasional shots and tear gas to try to disperse  looters, the distribution of aid appeared random, chaotic and  minimal. Downtown, young men could be seen carrying pistols.
And heavily armed gang members who once ran Haiti’s largest  slum, Cite Soleil, like warlords returned with a vengeance  after the quake damaged the National Penitentiary allowing  3,000 inmates to break out.
“It’s only natural that they would come back here. This has  always been their stronghold,” said a Haitian police officer in  the teeming warren of shacks, alleys and open sewers that is  home to more than 300,000 people.
There were jostling scrums for food and water as U.S.  military helicopters swooped down to throw out boxes of water  bottles and rations. A reporter also saw foreign aid workers  tossing packets of food to desperate Haitians.
“The distribution is totally disorganized. They are not  identifying the people who need the water. The sick and the old  have no chance,” said Estime Pierre Deny, standing at the back  of a crowd looking for water with his empty plastic container.
Haiti is the Western Hemisphere’s poorest country and has  for decades struggled with devastating storms, floods and  political unrest. Around 9,000 U.N. peacekeepers have provided  security here since a 2004 uprising ousted one president.
Looting has been sporadic since Tuesday’s earthquake, which  flattened large parts of the capital. But it appeared to widen yesterday as people became more desperate.
The U.N. mission responsible for security in Haiti lost at  least 40 of its members when its headquarters collapsed. The  United Nations said the mission’s chief, Hedi Annabi of  Tunisia, his deputy Luiz Carlos da Costa of Brazil and the U.N.  police commissioner in Haiti, Doug Coates of Canada, were  killed.
MORE RESCUED ALIVE
Aftershocks still shook the capital, terrifying survivors  and sending rubble and dust tumbling from buildings.
Dramatizing the need to keep up rescue efforts, three  people were pulled out alive from a supermarket early today.  U.S. and Turkish teams freed a 7-year-old Haitian girl, a  Haitian man and an American woman from the rubble of the  five-story building, Reuters photographer Carlos Rawlins said.
They were dazed but did not appear to be seriously  injured.
Rescuers had been ready to give up at the site yesterday,  until they were told that a supermarket cashier had managed to  call someone in Miami to say she was still alive inside. As  many as 100 more people could have been trapped inside the  collapsed market.
Yesterday, a Russian team pulled out two Haitian girls  still alive — 9-year-old Olon Remi and 11-year-old Senviol  Ovri — from the ruins of a house.
Trucks piled with corpses have been ferrying bodies to  hurriedly excavated mass graves outside the city, but thousands  of bodies are still believed buried under the rubble.
Interior Minister Paul Antoine Bien-Aime said around 50,000  bodies had already been collected and the final death toll will  likely be between 100,000 and 200,000.
Dozens of bloated bodies have been dumped in the yard  outside the main hospital on Saturday, decomposing in the sun.  The hospital gardens were a mass of beds with injured people,  with makeshift drips hanging from trees.
The weakened Haitian government is in no position to handle  the crisis alone. The quake destroyed the presidential palace  and knocked out communications and power. President Rene Preval  is living and working from the judicial police headquarters.
AIRPORT BOTTLENECK
Hillary Clinton told Haitians the United States will ensure  their country emerges “stronger and better” from the disaster.
“We will be here today, tomorrow and for the time ahead,”  she said after meeting Preval at the airport.
The U.S. State Department confirmed 15 Americans had died  in the temblor, including one of its employees in Haiti.
Dozens of countries have sent planes with rescue teams,  doctors, tents, food, medicine and other supplies, but faced a  bottleneck at Port-au-Prince’s small airport.
The American Red Cross said 50-bed field hospitals and  water purification equipment that were rerouted to neighboring  Dominican Republic arrived by truck convoy, allowing it to  start distributing water and first aid in Port-au-Prince.
Air traffic control in Port-au-Prince, hampered by damage  to the airport’s tower, was taken over by the U.S. military  with backup from the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS Carl  Vinson, which arrived off Haiti on Friday.
Navy helicopters are taking water and rations ashore and  ferrying injured people to a field hospital near the airport.
The Pan American Health Organization said at least eight  hospitals and health centers in Port-au-Prince had collapsed or  sustained damage and were unable to function.
The president of the Inter-American Development Bank, Luis  Alberto Moreno, will visit Haiti tomorrow and attend a donors  meeting in the Dominican Republic to start analyzing Haiti’s  reconstruction needs, a bank spokesman said.