Nine days after a major earthquake struck, "deeply needed aid streamed into Haiti's ravaged capital in quantities that relief agencies said is a clear sign of progress," the Miami Herald reports. Roads have been cleared, additional food and water distribution points are available and some new medical clinics are open.
"The U.S. military increased the capacity of the airport from 30 planes daily before the quake to 130, and three new airfields opened. The Port-au-Prince seaport, battered in the quake, opened for limited deliveries. Some relief agencies began shifting their focus to long-term relief and reconstruction," the newspaper writes (Burch et al., 1/21).
"The port should be able to handle as many as 250 containers a day starting
, when a commercial ship is to arrive," the Los Angeles Times writes. "Seaborne shipments are expected to dramatically increase the quantities of goods and equipment for the relief and recovery effort," according to the newspaper, which describes doctors' efforts to treat injured patients (Kraft/Elligwood, 1/22).
On Thursday, Fritz Longchamp, chief of staff to Haitian President Rene Preval, said the government plans to move 400,000 homeless people to new dwellings on the outskirts of Port-au-Prince, the Associated Press/Houston Chronicle reports. "They are going to be going to places where they will have at least some adequate facilities," Longchamp said. "The announcement came as search-and-rescue teams packed their dogs and gear Thursday, with hopes almost gone of finding any more alive in the ruins" (Faul/Lush, 1/22).
According to the Wall Street Journal, "By Thursday, nine days after the Jan. 12 earthquake, some rescue teams had flown home, and the Haitian government was expected to call off the rescues soon. The United Nations said 121 people have been pulled from the rubble by international teams, and that efforts were continuing. But U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, at a news conference with former President Bill Clinton, said the U.N. is moving to the early recovery phase and thinking about how to rebuild." The article examines rescue operations and how long people typically survive without food and water (Mathews, 1/22).
From the Telegraph: Elisabeth Byrs, a U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs spokesperson, said, "The rescue teams are concentrating more and more on humanitarian aid for those who need it." The article looks at the effort to resettle homeless people. The International Organization for Migration (IOM) said at least 500,000 people – higher than the Haitian government's number – were living in temporary camps. "The situation is in flux and there is no one size fits all for shelter solutions," said Vincent Houver, the IOM chief of mission. "Tents will not work in May when the long rainy season begins and later when hurricane season starts" (1/22).
The Economist examines the response to the earthquake and looks at why the delivery of aid was slow initially. According to the magazine, "the main reason" why aid was slow to arrive, "was that the earthquake knocked out both the institutions and the sinews of transport and communication on which aid agencies normally rely. So co-ordination – deciding who does what where – has been unusually slow and difficult. The rapid influx of well-meaning aid agencies that now throng the dusty remnants of Port-au-Prince has contributed to the confusion" (1/21).
http://globalhealth.kff.org/Daily-Reports/2010/January/22/GH-012210-Haiti.aspx