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Haiti Relief Effort: Food Bank Looted

BRADLEY S. KLAPPER   01/15/10 04:49 PM ET   AP

Haiti Relief Effort
Haiti Relief Effort: A food bank was looted on Friday.

GENEVA — Some 6,000 tons of food aid will be distributed shortly in Haiti, a U.N. spokeswoman said Friday, adding that reports that U.N. warehouses in Haiti had been looted were overblown.

Officials checked four U.N. food agency warehouses in the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince on Friday after receiving reports from local partners of looting, said Emilia Casella, a World Food Program spokeswoman.

"The food is there," Casella told The Associated Press. "They are also working on getting a peacekeeper contingent to secure the locations."

Casella said 6,000 tons of food stored were found in a damaged warehouse near the capital's Cite Soleil slum, and the biscuits, ready-to-eat meals and other supplies would be handed out shortly. That is 40 percent of the U.N.'s pre-quake food stocks of 15,000 tons in Haiti.

There are six other U.N. warehouses outside the capital, and there were no reports of looting at those, Casella said.

Distributing food and clean water to hungry and thirsty quake survivors is the top challenge of the early relief effort. Looting, bad roads, a ruined port, an overwhelmed Port-au-Prince airport and fears of violence has meant most Haitians have received no help three days after Tuesday's 7.0-magnitude quake.

Casella earlier said regular food stores in the capital "have been cleaned out" by desperate Haitians since the 7-magnitude quake Tuesday killed thousands and left countless more buried under the rubble.

Casella said her agency was working to collect enough ready-to-eat meals to feed 2 million Haitians for a month, and the U.N. was planning to ask governments later Friday for $550 million in humanitarian pledges for the Western Hemisphere's poorest nation.

"The physical destruction is so great that physically getting from point A to B with the supplies is not an easy task," Casella told a news conference. "Pictures can get out instantly ... and that's important because the world needs to know. But getting physically tons and tons of equipment and food and water is not as instant as Twitter or Skype or 24-hour television news."

The international community has already donated hundreds of millions of dollars and sent in the first of hundreds of doctors, engineers, soldiers and aid workers.

But the U.N. and others still hadn't figured out how to deliver assistance through broken roads and crumpled buildings, with little machinery to clear the mess. They are also contending with masses of people gathered in Port-au-Prince's streets, few working phones and a massive influx of goods and personnel without an organized plan.

U.N. humanitarian spokeswoman Elisabeth Byrs said peacekeepers were maintaining security in Haiti, despite the challenges.

"It's tense but they can cope," Byrs said. "People who have not been eating or drinking for almost 50 hours and are already in a very poor situation, if they see a truck with something ... or if they see a supermarket which has collapsed, they just rush to get something to eat."

Complicating the security situation was the complete destruction of Port-au-Prince's main prison. The International Red Cross said a few inmates died but that the vast majority – 4,000 – had escaped and were freely roaming the capital.

Search-and-rescue operations remained the immediate focus, but Byrs said there was no need for countries and groups to send additional teams or field hospitals. There are 17 such teams on the ground and six more are coming.

"The arrival of others could compromise the work of those who are on the spot and are searching the rubble," she said. "The priority for the moment is for medical teams."

Byrs said 10 percent of the homes in Port-au-Prince have been destroyed, meaning there are at least 300,000 homeless people.

She also warned that "the issue of corpse collection and disposal" was becoming increasingly critical as dead bodies piled up on the streets.

The World Health Organization said corpses should be treated with chemicals to prevent them from decomposing and buried in open ditches. But mass graves aren't recommended because that would prevent families from identifying lost relatives, said WHO spokesman Paul Garwood.

"The scale of this disaster has overwhelmed all capacities," Garwood said. "There's an urgent need to get more and more body bags into the area so that we can properly handle these bodies."

___

Associated Press writers Eliane Engeler and Frank Jordans contributed to this report.

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GENEVA — Some 6,000 tons of food aid will be distributed shortly in Haiti, a U.N. spokeswoman said Friday, adding that reports that U.N. warehouses in Haiti had been looted were overblown. Offi...
GENEVA — Some 6,000 tons of food aid will be distributed shortly in Haiti, a U.N. spokeswoman said Friday, adding that reports that U.N. warehouses in Haiti had been looted were overblown. Offi...
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03:37 PM on 01/19/2010
I agree with previous comments that the words looting and looter to be removed form the conversation. These people are struggling to stay alive. We are witness to a seriously impoverished populous that is largely uneducated, and who speak another language. Add to this mix , that they have a legitimate leeriness for getting once again screwed by the powerful elite that has ransacked their country for over 500 years. It is all relevant.

They are not looters or scavengers; they are simply, survivors.
04:14 AM on 01/16/2010
Haiti needs General Russel Honore there now!!
12:08 AM on 01/16/2010
Right after the Haiti earthquake, the rest of the world has responded to its need for support by sending over goods and relief workers all day. Unfortunately, the airport was so full that they were forced to turn away planes, which delayed the arrival of relief goods to Haiti. http://bit.ly/haiti-efforts-update-details
Intelligentia
Anti-Racist
10:13 PM on 01/15/2010
What a great journalistic piece? There those in Haiti who are not interested in the suffering there. They are only there for their small-minded dehumanization of Haitians for their ideocracy.
01:38 PM on 01/15/2010
as i see it... the destruction is so great that you cannot reach starving people. so, if you are the unfortunate group with dead bodies all around you, then how would you feed your family? or what will you survive, with some hope that eventually help will arrive? but, then maybe not.
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lislbc
if only closed minds came with closed mouths...
01:24 PM on 01/15/2010
Headline says 'looted', first paragraph says 'overblown'. Lay off with the 'L' word, it is an offensive and misleading term under these circumstances. Are people supposed to politely form queues and wait - 3 days in - for power and control to be established and distribution to begin in some way that suits people who are not dealing with the reality in real time??? 3 days with no food and water and no door would stop me from finding ways to survive and keep my loved ones alive. OBTAINING. FORAGING. UTLIZING. Try those words on for size. Good luck to the survivors.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
01:12 PM on 01/15/2010
Possibly we should question the accuracy of this. 15,000 tons = 30 Million pounds of supplies. Even if every person carted off 50 pounds of food (high considering kids can't handle that much weight), then we have 600,000 individuals '''looting'''. No way. This had to happen with trucks, fork lift and organization to make that much food disappear so quickly.
12:59 PM on 01/15/2010
It would seem that any and all respectable journalist/bloggers would refrain from using the infamous "L" word under these circumstances. Desperate/starving people will do almost anything to stay alive.
12:49 PM on 01/15/2010
Here's a thought: If there are several food banks, one in the capital, why have they not distributed the food to hold people over while the powers that be figure out the "logistics?" Could it be that the level of desperation directly affects the amount of money the organizations are able to raise by depiciting nearly four days of hungry, dying people?
01:01 PM on 01/15/2010
There's been an earthquake. Building have collapsed, many of them into the streets, many of which have buckled. Getting anything anywhere except by foot is almost impossible. Trucking pallets of food and water through the streets would not only be dangerous, it would trigger riots. Haven't the people suffered enough?

I don't think anyone but Limbaugh really thinks this a politically motivated effort.
01:11 PM on 01/15/2010
not political - financial - I am with Honore who stated the army should have been in there on day one securing the place and reassuring people that help was on the way and then have US AID come in - people that could have been saved have died
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02:21 PM on 01/15/2010
yeah of course... because it is so much better to let them go hungry in the damn streets... ppl like you are idiots!
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vippy
Carpe Diem!
12:49 PM on 01/15/2010
From what I see on the tube, the news helicopters get around fine, if it was me, I would be hands-on,
report and then deliver food or whatever. How many correspondents do we need over there? Utilize their choppers for something beneficial to the people.
12:54 PM on 01/15/2010
Exactly - good point - ditto - no earthly reason why we should be on day four and still not one of those hundreds of people driving and and flying in and out of the capital could not carry some water
01:03 PM on 01/15/2010
How much food and to whom? How would you control the press of people desperate to get food?

They're hungry, they need food, water and medical care but tossing it out like feed to chickens won't do any good.

Besides, if they don't get the dead bodies off the streets it will be moot, disease will kill everyone.
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12:30 PM on 01/15/2010
I am reminded of the pictures of Katrina survivors who were wading through the flood waters with loaves of bread and bottled water. Some of them were described as getting what food they could under desperate circumstances, and some of them were described as looters. In both pictures one could see that they had just taken the basics from destroyed grocery stores, in order to survive. I wonder if the description of looting in the headline is not similarly misleading.
If I were there, hungry and thirsty, and a nearby destroyed and unsupervised building contained the means to keep me and my family alive for a few more days, I too would try to recover what food I could from the ruins.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JanPoore
12:13 PM on 01/15/2010
The media needs to stop calling these people looters. They are homeless, in-shock, desperate people who have not eaten in days with children who have not had food or water for days and if they find a warehouse that has food and water there is no reason why they shouldn't go get it. SInce the international aid is having trouble getting into the city due to debris, the people have to fend for themselves in the meantime. I doubt they would be called looters if they were white. It makes me sick to read that they are stealing. At this point they need to get food and water wherever it is.
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12:28 PM on 01/15/2010
You have said it correctly, the media need to get new thinkers on the wires -- looting is not what is going on here.

I am happy to read that many people here can relate to what is going on in Haiti --empathize with the people and their need to eat and have water.

What good is the food in the warehouses? The media should be helping them break down the doors to get food to the people, rather than trying to cast a evil veil on the situation.
12:35 PM on 01/15/2010
Ya its a shame that they won't be able to distribute it fairly and instead armed haitians are using it as barter and things to hold over others for power and control.

but they aren't looters...sigh

this is going to get worse before gets better.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LiberTLover
12:47 PM on 01/15/2010
Where in the article did it say anything about armed Haitians using food to barter? And barter for what? in case you didn't notice these people have NOTHING. No food, no shelter, no money. And power and control over what? Corpses and destruction and wounded people? Yeah, that must be it, you nailed it.
12:03 PM on 01/15/2010
The title tells me nothing about what the actual article is about. There are two sentences on "looting". This is incredibly misleading. Why post this article from the AP? There are other, more informed stories being reported.
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justsomeguywhocameby
Wherever you go there you are.
12:17 PM on 01/15/2010
Welcome to HuffyPuffy.
Since you seem to be new here, I would offer a some advice:

1. The headlines are meant to attract attention and are often misleading.
2. The articles are seldom factual, more often they are opinion pieces disguised as News.
3. The real value here can be found in the comment's section, once you filter out the noise.

I hope you come to enjoy our crazy family.
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12:23 PM on 01/15/2010
You have summed up the HP -- the comments when allowed is the pulse of HP.
12:25 PM on 01/15/2010
Spot on, very well said.
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woodshoe
MAYDAY! BastaYA!
11:54 AM on 01/15/2010
leaving this link once more, for those who happen upon this thread.. and remember this orwell quote as you read;
“He who controls the present, controls the past. He who controls the past, controls the future.”

an abbreviated history of haiti and US intervention there;

http://www.truthout.org/article/noam-chomsky-the-tragedy-haiti
01:31 PM on 01/15/2010
so what is the difference?
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woodshoe
MAYDAY! BastaYA!
04:02 PM on 01/15/2010
i am sorry mojica,.. the difference between? what and what?
07:39 AM on 01/18/2010
so, as i understand it according to oswell .. is there is no difference , whoever controls the present also controls both past and future . there is no difference.
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beartrack
Follow the track, find the bear ?
11:53 AM on 01/15/2010
Let's take a look at who is doing the job there. When we got to see the first video from the ground, did you notice who's planes were already on the ground doing the job ? Yep, the US Coast Guard. These guys, along with the rest of our military resources, are walking the walk right now and that should be remembered over all this other crap.
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woodshoe
MAYDAY! BastaYA!
11:59 AM on 01/15/2010
ahem,.. cough cough.. you might first familiarize yourself with the many occupations and slaughters of the haitian people by the US military before you suppose they are in any position to do haiti any favors,.. or less likely, that their arrival should lead the haitians to celebrate.

http://www.truthout.org/article/noam-chomsky-the-tragedy-haiti

at the very very best.. they could only offer reparations,.. not favors or charity.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
12:55 PM on 01/15/2010
So you want the Coast Guard to pack up and leave? That rectifies it all? BS. People scared, hurt, hungry, and thirsty today don't care all that much what happened in the past - they are concerned with their survival just as much as you are concerned with blaming all Haiti's ills on the US.
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vim876
03:56 PM on 01/15/2010
Can't change the past. If they're doing the right thing now, that's a big step forward.