Thousands feared dead after Haiti horror quake

Haiti's Prime Minister yesterday warned the death toll may top 100,000 in a calamitous earthquake which left streets strewn with corpses and thousands missing in a scene of utter carnage. Hospitals collapsed, destroyed schools were full of dead and the...

Haiti's Prime Minister yesterday warned the death toll may top 100,000 in a calamitous earthquake which left streets strewn with corpses and thousands missing in a scene of utter carnage.

Hospitals collapsed, destroyed schools were full of dead and the cries of trapped victims escaped from crushed buildings in the centre of the capital Port-au-Prince, which an AFP correspondent said was "mostly destroyed".

Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive said the final death toll from the 7.0 quake could be "well over 100,000", as an international aid effort geared up in a race against time to pull survivors from the ruins.

"I hope that is not true, because I hope the people had the time to get out. Because we have so much people on the streets right now, we don't know exactly where they were living," Mr Bellerive said.

President Rene Preval painted a scene of complete destruction in his impoverished Caribbean nation after the quake struck on Tuesday.

"Parliament has collapsed. The tax office has collapsed. Schools have collapsed. Hospitals have collapsed," he told the Miami Herald, estimating the number of dead in the thousands.

"There are a lot of schools that have a lot of dead people in them," he said, as experts spoke of the worst quake to hit the disaster-prone nation in more than a century.

With hospitals also having crumbled in the fury of the quake, medical services were struggling to cope with the flow of wounded.

There are "tens of thousands of victims and considerable damage," Haiti's ambassador to the Organisation of American States Duly Brutus said.

"The most urgent need is to help the thousands of people who are still alive and trapped in the ruins," he added, saying the last quake of such magnitude to strike Haiti was in 1842.

Mr Preval's wife, First Lady Elisabeth Preval, told the US daily she had seen bodies in the streets of Port-au-Prince and had heard the cries of victims still trapped in the rubble of the parliament building.

"I'm stepping over dead bodies. A lot of people are buried under buildings. The general hospital has collapsed. We need support. We need help. We need engineers," she said.

UN chief Ban Ki-moon said the capital, with its population of two million people had borne the brunt of the quake which struck at 4.53 p.m. (2153GMT), saying vast areas had been destroyed.

While much of the rest of the impoverished Caribbean nation appeared largely unaffected, Mr Ban gave a grim assessment of the devastation in Port-au-Prince, saying the city's few basic services had collapsed.

"There is no doubt that we are facing a major humanitarian emergency and that a major relief effort will be required," he told a press conference in the United Nations, as he prepared to visit Haiti as soon as possible.

The temblor toppled the cupola on the gleaming white presidential palace, a major hotel where 200 tourists were missing and the headquarters of the UN mission in Haiti where up to 250 personnel were unaccounted for.

Five people were confirmed dead in the UN headquarters, and the head of the peacekeeping mission, Tunisian Hedi Annabi, was among the missing.

Jordan reported that three of its peacekeepers were killed and 21 wounded in the quake. Brazil said 15 of its peacekeepers were killed while eight Chinese soldiers were buried in rubble and 10 were missing, state media said.

An Argentine-staffed hospital was the only one left operating in the city and was struggling to cope with huge numbers of injured, its director told Argentine television.

A major international relief operation was put underway with the US, France, Britain and Canada all promising help.

US President Barack Obama vowed a swift and aggressive effort to save lives and said search and rescue teams would arrive within hours after a "heartwrenching" earthquake.

The US military yesterday mobilised ships, aircraft and expert teams due to arrive within hours to help the relief effort. An aircraft carrier, the USS Carl Vinson, was on the way and should arrive today.

Planeloads of rescue teams and relief supplies were quickly dispatched from nations including Britain, Canada, Russia, Spain, France, Germany, The Netherlands and Russia.

As well as virtually destroying Port-Au-Prince, the earthquake also caused widespread destruction in the resort town of Jacmel, south of the capital, a witness said yesterday, saying he saw an entire mountain almost collapsed.

Emmet Murphy, local head of the US non-governmental organization ADCI/VOCA, said, "I was driving back to Jacmel in the mountains when the entire mountain seemed to fall down all around me."

Two hundred foreigners were missing at the Hotel Montana, French Secretary of State for Cooperation Alain Joyandet said.

Among the dead was the archbishop of Port-au-Prince Monsignor Serge Miot the Missionary International Service News Agency reported in Rome.

Pope Benedict XVI urged a generous response to the catastrophe, lamenting Haiti's "tragic situation (involving) huge loss of human life, a great number of homeless and missing and considerable material damage."

Appeal for help

The public is being asked to help the victims of the Haiti earthquake as the extent of the devastation continues to emerge.

SOS Malta has launched an emergency appeal to collect donations. These can be deposited in APS account 20000245111; HSBC account 006070932050 or BOV account 40013974950.

Donations can also be sent to SOS Malta, 9, Camilleri Court, Testaferrata Street, Ta' Xbiex XBX 1407 or via www.sos malta.org/donate_now.

Red Cross Malta has also made a public appeal for donations, either in BOV account 102 063 740 12, at their offices in 104, St Ursula Street, Valletta or at its Gozo branch, Mġarr Road, Xewkija. For information call on 2122 2645.

A public activity to collect provisions for victims of recent disasters, including in Haiti and the torrential downpours in Albania, will be held on Saturday and Sunday.

The activity will take place at the Humanitarian Aid Section of the Civil Protection Department at Shipwrights Wharf, Marsa (behind Marsovin) between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. on both days.

Donations can also be made to two accounts that have been opened at the Bank of Valletta, account number 40018758443; and HSBC on account 078002391050.

More details on the provisions to be collected during the weekend activity will be communicated in due course.

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