UN to launch Haiti appeal
Aid agencies will launch an appeal for $550m to help survivors of the earthquake in Haiti, a UN spokeswoman said
Thousands of people injured in Tuesday’s massive earthquake in the
Caribbean country spent another night waiting for help, many lying on
sidewalks, as their despair turned to anger.
A spokeswoman for
the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said
17 search and rescue teams were deployed in the capital Port-au-Prince,
with six more on their way, but no further teams were needed for now.
“There
are pockets of survival, we shouldn’t give up hope,” spokeswoman
Elisabeth Byrs said. “They are working around the clock.”
No further field hospitals were required but medical teams including surgeons and medicines were badly needed, Byrs said.
At
least 10 percent of housing in the capital was destroyed, making about
300,000 homeless, but in some areas 50 percent of buildings were
destroyed or badly damaged, according to a preliminary assessment by UN
disaster experts.
Under the UN appeal, the World Food Programme
will seek to provide life-saving food rations to two million destitute
people for the next month. A longer-term operation is planned up to
July 15.
“We need high-energy biscuits and ready-to-eat meals as quickly as possible,” WFP spokeswoman Emilia Casella said.
The
WFP had reports from partner aid agencies that its warehouses in Haiti
had been looted, but had not been able to reach them yet to verify
whether its stocks were gone, she said.
“In an emergency,
looting is something that is not unusual. Stores have been cleaned out.
People in a desperate situation will do what they can to get food for
their loved ones,” Casella told reporters in Geneva.
The WFP
distributed food to 4,000 people gathered at the prime minister’s
compound in Port-au-Prince on Thursday following an earlier hand-out in
the town of Jacmel.
“We are trying to get the food we do have
our hands on to people. What we have been able to do so far is a drop
in the bucket,” Casella said.
The WFP was also exploring the
possibility of setting up some 200 collective kitchens in
Port-au-Prince to feed the homeless, she said.