Haiti fears death toll of 150,000 may double

HAITI’S government raised the confirmed earthquake death toll to 150,000 yesterday and said the figure could double as reports…

HAITI’S government raised the confirmed earthquake death toll to 150,000 yesterday and said the figure could double as reports from outside the capital are collated.

Aid agencies said food, water and basic supplies were reaching more people, but clinics were also starting to see more infections and complications from amateur medical treatment.

The confirmed death toll in the Port-au-Prince area alone had topped 150,000, said the communications minister, and more bodies remained uncounted. Corpses are still visible in the rubble in neighbourhoods such as Pétionville, Gressier, Carrefour and the downtown area.

The government’s figures were based on data from CNE, a state company which has collected and buried corpses in mass graves in Port-au-Prince and a semi-rural wasteland, Titanyen, outside the capital.

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It was a sharp spike from Saturday, when the UN said the government had confirmed 111,481 bodies. Before yesterday’s statement, authorities had estimated a total of 200,000 dead after the January 12th quake. Up to three million people are estimated to need aid.

The US military expanded its role when a convoy of army Humvees, accompanied by Brazilian UN troops, delivered food packs and water to Cite Soleil, the capital’s most notorious slum. “The aid we have available is being pushed out,” Lieut Gen Ken Keen, commander of US military operation in Haiti, told Reuters. “But the need is tremendous.”

With 13,000 personnel in Haiti and on ships offshore, the US military has overtaken the UN’s peacekeeping mission’s capacity. Last Friday it formally obtained broad authority to control air and sea ports and secure roads to support relief efforts.

Cuba’s Fidel Castro joined a chorus of leftist Latin leaders who have accused the US of “occupying” the republic under an aid banner. Venezuela’s Hugo Chávez, speaking on his weekly TV show, said: “Obama, send vaccinations, kid, send vaccinations. Each soldier that you send there should carry a medical kit instead of hand grenades and machine guns.”

Although the UN had announced that Haiti’s government had halted search-and-rescue operations, international rescue teams managed on Saturday to free a man trapped in the rubble of Port-au-Prince. The man was extracted from the ruins of the Hotel Napoli Inn. He was the latest of more than 130 people pulled alive from under wrecked buildings by rescue teams.

Médecins Sans Frontières has said it is shifting from surgery to the “next level” of need.

“In some parts of Port-au-Prince, the teams are starting to see more people coming to their hospitals who have infections or complications following basic or amateur attempts at treatment in the early days of the aftermath,” it said. – (Guardian service, additional reporting Reuters)