Haiti death toll could reach 300,000, Preval says

PLAYA DEL CARMEN, Mexico, (Reuters) – The death toll  from last month’s devastating earthquake in Haiti could jump to  300,000 people, including the bodies buried under collapsed  buildings in the capital, Haitian President Rene Preval said yesterday.

“You have seen the images you are familiar with the  pictures. More than 200,000 bodies were collected on the  streets without counting those that are still under the  rubble,” Preval told a meeting of Latin American and Caribbean  leaders in Mexico. “We might reach 300,000 people.”

That would make Haiti’s earthquake one of the most lethal  natural disasters in modern history, more than the 200,000  people killed in the Indian Ocean tsunami in 2004.

The cost of rebuilding the impoverished country after the  7.0-magnitude quake could be as high as $14 billion, according  to the Inter-American Development Bank.

Preval’s plea for aid will be at the top of the agenda at  the regional summit being held near the Mexican resort town of  Playa del Carmen.

With 250,000 houses destroyed and 1.5 million people living  in tent camps made with bed sheets and plastic scraps in nearly  every open space in the collapsed capital of Port-au-Prince,  Preval said the most urgent need is for emergency shelter.

Aid workers worry that squalid conditions in the camps,  many which have no latrines or source of clean water, could  lead to disease outbreaks when the rainy season begins in  earnest in March.

“The first rainy days that have started falling in  Port-au-Prince have made it impossible to enjoy a dignified  life and this is the reason for the request for shelters,”  Preval said.

Looking ahead to a meeting with international donors to  determine the overall shape of rebuilding plans, Preval  suggested Haiti should decentralize away from Port-au-Prince,  which suffered the heaviest damages.

“We will not try to reconstruct but rather to refound the  country, where we don’t concentrate ourselves in one capital,”  Preval said. He encouraged Latin American countries to step up  investments in industry to help Haiti free itself from  dependence on international aid.