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On the Ground in Haiti: Oxfam's Humanitarian Coordinator Describes the Scene
January 14, 2010Following the devastating earthquake in Haiti, Cedric Perus, humanitarian coordinator in Port-au-Prince for international aid agency Oxfam, said: "I have seen wounded people flooding into the hospitals and buildings of several stories high that are now totally flat. Several thousands have probably died in the quake, but it will take time to get a full picture. Bodies may stay under the rubble for a long time because it is difficult to access some sites, and heavy lifting equipment is in limited supply. "There are bodies all over the city. People have nowhere to put them so they wrap them in sheets and cardboards in the hope that the authorities will pick them up. People have also piled bodies in front of the city's main hospitals. "Oxfam's teams have now started to assess the scale of the disaster across the different parts of Port–au-Prince as some have been more severely affected than others. The epicenter was near the slum of Carrefour, where people were living in flimsy shacks. There are reports that over 90 percent of its buildings are in ruins. "Our immediate priorities will be providing safe water and shelter material for the people who have lost their homes. Many people have lost their homes and were sleeping out in the open last night. There has been no rain yet, but there was rain earlier in the week and if it comes again, it will make the situation much worse for all those made homeless by this quake. It is dangerous at night. Lootings were widespread and some markets were ransacked." Full release.

