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At least 16 U.N. staff dead after Haiti quake

Other News Materials 14 January 2010 07:17 (UTC +04:00)
The United Nations said on Wednesday at least 16 people at its peacekeeping mission in Haiti died when its headquarters and other buildings collapsed in an earthquake and predicted the death toll would soar, Reuters reported.
At least 16 U.N. staff dead after Haiti quake

The United Nations said on Wednesday at least 16 people at its peacekeeping mission in Haiti died when its headquarters and other buildings collapsed in an earthquake and predicted the death toll would soar, Reuters reported.

U.N.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said 11 Brazilians, three Jordanians, one Argentinian and one Chadian had died in the earthquake on Tuesday. Susana Malcorra, a senior U.N. peacekeeping official, put the preliminary figure for the number of injured at 56.

U.N. peacekeeping chief Alain Le Roy said the U.N. death toll was expected to rise sharply as rescue workers searched the rubble of the five-story headquarters and other buildings.

"The number of casualties and fatalities will be extremely high," he told reporters.

Le Roy and Malcorra said around 150 U.N. staff members were still missing, among them the head of the MINUSTAH peacekeeping mission in Haiti, Hedi Annabi, and his deputy.

Haitian President Rene Preval declared that Annabi, a Tunisian believed to be aged 65, had been confirmed dead, but U.N. officials cast doubt on his remarks.

"We are aware of the news reports attributed to President Preval that Annabi has been confirmed to have been killed," U.N. peacekeeping spokesman Nicholas Birnback said.

"We've been in touch with the U.N. mission in Haiti ... and with the permanent mission of Haiti to the United Nations, and neither has been able to confirm this information," he said, adding that the world body was urgently seeking clarification of Preval's remarks.

Le Roy said Annabi was in the building at the time of the earthquake and that he was believed to be among those trapped in the rubble of the MINUSTAH headquarters.

U.N. spokesman Martin Nesirky said the damage to the nation was vast and "tens, if not hundreds of thousands of homes" had been damaged in the earthquake, which struck late Tuesday afternoon.

The U.N. mission was headquartered in the former Christopher Hotel in the capital Port-au-Prince, where administrative staff worked. Most of MINUSTAH's 9,000 troops and police were located elsewhere.

SEARCH AND RESCUE

U.N. humanitarian affairs chief John Holmes said earlier that between 3 million and 3.5 million people were living in areas affected by severe shaking during the earthquake and its aftershocks. It was not clear how many people had died.

"Initial reports suggest a high number of casualties," Holmes said. Preval said he had heard total death toll estimates as high as 50,000.

The main priority, Holmes said, was search-and-rescue operations to find and extract buried people. He said a Chinese team had arrived at the airport in Port-au-Prince and that two U.S. teams were expected later on Wednesday.

Further search-and-rescue teams were expected to arrive from France, Iceland and the neighboring Dominican Republic in the near future, he said.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said he was sending Le Roy's deputy, Edmond Mulet, to Haiti. Le Roy said Mulet would arrive and take over as the acting head of MINUSTAH on Thursday as rescue workers search for Annabi.

The U.N. chief also said $10 million would be released immediately from the world body's central emergency response fund to assist aid efforts.

Holmes said the United Nations would launch a flash appeal to raise more funds for Haiti over the next few days. Ban said the world body would later organize a donors' conference to help Haiti recover from the earthquake.

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