
The Government of Haiti called on Friday, the search for survivors 10 days after the devastating earthquake, and moved on with plans to 400,000 displaced Haitians in tent cities in an effort to improve the abysmal sanitation and little security in the house while the capital city of the first steps Notes for reconstruction.
Most of the international search and rescue teams, the operation of the wound, a grim realization that someone is still missing among the pyramids of rubble that the city landscape defined by now been killed. Team members from Fairfax County said Friday that they will be rescued 16 Haitians and could go home the next day had.
The teams had remarkable success ditch free survivors who manage to save a 84-year-old woman Friday. The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, said Saturday that some 132 people were pulled alive from under collapsed buildings since the 12th Quake in January, reported news agencies. Haitian officials place the death toll at 75,000 and growing, while thousands of bodies buried in the houses and buildings to remain plunged by 7.0-magnitude quake.
Across the capital, the aftershocks continue to rumble Friday, joined the international relief food and water for thousands of desperate Haitians, many of them now live in over 500 squalid camps that grew in the parks, stadiums and playgrounds. Fire burning in their houses and smelled several halls, the center of gasoline, apparently arson set by looters.
The U.S. military said 2600 U.S. troops on the ground here, 10,300 more in offshore vessels. Navy and Coast Guard engineers continued work on the repair of the harbor, a potentially important delivery point for aid that would relieve overwhelmed airport, although they acknowledged that a complete update probably months.
Haitian government officials outlined plans to build at 11 tent cities in and around the capital. The resulting plan will be coordinated with the international relief officials, also calls for a camp to 10,000 Haitians in the town of Croix des Bouquets, about eight miles northeast of the capital building.
“We are here to support the Haitian government what they want,” said Nicholas Reader, a spokesman for the UN relief effort here. “People will do what they must do. If they must feel to leave the city to survive, we will do what they must do to support them.”
