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Rebecca Gustafson, part of the disaster assistance team of USAID, said international agencies are assessing the best places for community water treatment centers. She said much of the focus of international aid for now is on rescue and recovery efforts. "Once that wave subsides, in the coming days you'll see more and more aid coming in," she said. While government agencies and troops worked to move supplies out of the jammed airport, some Haitians and far smaller organizations worked on their own to get aid to thirsty, hungry people. Milero Cedamou, the 33-year-old owner of a small water delivery company, twice drove his small tanker truck 10 miles outside Port-au-Prince, paying $25 for each fill-up and then returned to a tent camp where thousands of homeless people were living. "This is a crisis of unspeakable magnitude, it's normal for every Haitian to help," Cedamou said. "This is not charity." Jean Ponce, a 36-year-old mason, was among 200 people holding plastic buckets who clustered around the truck
-- emblazoned with the slogan "Wait for God" on its side -- when it returned. He lost one of his children in the quake and said the bucketful he collected would be the first drinkable water his four surviving children tasted since the disaster struck. "This is nearly like a miracle," Ponce said.
[Associated
Press;
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