Haiti hospitals overwhelmed by quake victims as death toll hits 1,297
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[August 16, 2021]
By Laura Gottesdiener
PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) - Haiti's
hospitals were swamped on Sunday by thousands of injured residents after
a devastating earthquake the day before killed at least 1,297 people as
authorities raced to bring doctors to the worst-hit areas before a major
storm hits.
The 7.2 magnitude quake on Saturday destroyed thousands of homes and
buildings in a Caribbean nation which is still clawing its way back from
another major temblor 11 years ago and is reeling from the
assassination of its president last month.
Southwestern Haiti bore the brunt of the blow, especially in the region
in and around the town of Les Cayes. Haiti's Civil Protection Agency
said the toll from the disaster had climbed to 1,297 and the hospitals
that were still functioning were struggling to cope as some 5,700 people
were injured.
In the northwestern city of Jeremie, another badly hit area, doctors
treated injured patients on hospital stretchers underneath trees and on
mattresses by the side of the road, as healthcare centers have run out
of space.
"We do have a serious issue," Jerry Chandler, the head of Haiti's Civil
Protection Agency, told Reuters.
"There are very important facilities that are dysfunctional as we speak
and those that are functional are receiving an overflow of patients," he
said.
The challenge facing Haiti has been exacerbated by the coronavirus
pandemic, a severe economic downturn aggravated by fierce gang violence,
and a political crisis that has engulfed the troubled nation after the
assassination of President Jovenel Moise on July 7.
Churches, hotels, hospitals and schools were badly damaged or destroyed,
while the walls of a prison were rent open by the violent shudders that
convulsed Haiti. Some 13,694 houses were destroyed, the civil protection
agency said, suggesting the toll could rise further.
In Les Cayes, a seafront town of some 90,000 people, rescuers in red
hard hats and blue overalls pulled bodies from the tangled wreckage of
one building, as a yellow mechanical excavator nearby helped to shift
the rubble.
Haiti's Prime Minister Ariel Henry, who flew to visit Les Cayes, praised
the dignity shown by people there even in the midst of their suffering.
"They are affected but resilient. They fight to survive," he said,
thanking international agencies and foreign governments for their
support.
Nearby countries, including the Dominican Republic and Mexico, rushed to
send desperately needed food and medicines by air and across Haiti's
land border. Colombia sent search and rescue personnel.
The United States dispatched vital supplies and deployed a 65-person
urban search-and-rescue team with specialized equipment, said Samantha
Power, the administrator of the United States Agency for International
Development (USAID).
From the Vatican, Pope Francis urged the international community to show
support swiftly. "May solidarity from everyone lighten the consequences
of the tragedy," he told pilgrims and tourists at his Sunday blessing in
St. Peter's Square.
However, Haiti's government appealed to aid organizations against
setting up makeshift camps and urged them to work through the planning
ministry, an apparent attempt to avoid the mistakes made following the
devastating 2010 earthquake that killed tens of thousands of
people.
Many Haitians prepared on Sunday to spend a second night sleeping in the
open, traumatized by memories of that magnitude 7 quake 11 years ago
that struck far closer to the sprawling capital, Port-au-Prince.
At Port-au-Prince airport, international aid workers, doctors and rescue
workers boarded flights to Les Cayes. A U.S. Coast Guard helicopter
ferried the wounded.
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People walk past a house destroyed following a 7.2 magnitude
earthquake in Les Cayes, Haiti August 14, 2021. REUTERS/Ralph Tedy
Erol
The rescue and aid efforts will be complicated by
Tropical Depression Grace, which is expected to lash Haiti with
heavy rainfall on Monday. Some 75 to 100 milliliters of rainfall was
expected, which may trigger landslides and cause some rivers to
flood, Haiti's Civil Protection Agency said.
"We ask the population to remain vigilant," the
agency added.
Thousands of people sleeping in the streets would be exposed to the
torrential rains amid a rising risk of water-borne diseases, said
Chandler, the head of the agency.
The death toll is expected to rise as telephone network has been
down in more remote areas. In difficult-to-reach villages many
houses were fragile and built on slopes vulnerable to landslides,
said Alix Percinthe, from the ActionAid charity.
He said one local leader had informed him there were 47 deaths in
his area not yet reported to regional authorities.
HUMANITARIAN CORRIDOR
Footage of Saturday's aftermath posted on social media showed
residents reaching into narrow openings in piles of fallen masonry
to pull shocked and distraught people from the debris of walls and
roofs that had crumbled around them.
Access to the worst-hit areas was complicated by a deterioration in
law and order that has left key access roads in parts of Haiti in
the hands of gangs. In a video posted on social media, one gang
leader said the armed groups had declared a truce along the route to
Les Cayes.
Chandler said boats and helicopters were being used to bring in aid
but the government was working to establish safe access by road. A
first convoy of aid had made it through by land to the region of Les
Cayes.
The United Nations called for a "humanitarian corridor" to be
established so that aid can pass through gang-held territories.
Following Moise's assassination, which authorities have alleged was
carried out by a group of largely Colombian mercenaries and Haitian
accomplices, Prime Minister Henry said officials would aim to hold
elections for a new president as soon as possible.
However, reports this week suggested that the vote initially
earmarked for September would not take place until November. The
chaos unleashed by Saturday's disaster is likely to make the
task of holding prompt elections harder still.
Haiti has long been politically unstable and Haitians have also
suffered from problems stemming from international aid efforts and
peace-keeping deployments during the past decade.
A sexual misconduct scandal centering on Oxfam International
blighted the record of charity workers in Haiti, while a cholera
outbreak linked to U.N. peacekeepers led to thousands of deaths.
(Additional reporting by Kate Chappell in Kingston, Sarah Marsh in
Havana and Philip Pullella, Olive Griffin; Writing by Dave Graham,
Drazen Jorgic; Editing by Daniel Flynn, Chizu Nomiyama and Diane
Craft)
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