Haiti, donors face huge task to ‘build back better’

“Retou ala Vi. Ayiti Pap Peri” (Back to life, Haiti will not die) reads the banner in Creole stretched up beside a crowded camp of earthquake survivors in the heart of the wrecked capital Port-au-Prince.

Life, in the form of bustling pedestrians, chaotic traffic and teeming street markets, has indeed bounced back in the city after the devastating Jan. 12 quake that killed maybe more than 300,000 and turned streets into jumbles of rubble.

But a massive task of reconstructing the quake-shattered capital and its dependent nation — a small Caribbean state that was already a byword for poverty in the Western Hemisphere — now faces Haiti’s government and donors when they meet in New York on Wednesday to pledge funds and agree to strategies.

President Rene Preval and the country’s foreign partners have stressed that the rebuilding should seek not just to put back what was lost — the destroyed buildings, schools and hospitals — but lift Haiti out of the cycle of instability and underdevelopment that has kept it mired in misery for decades.

“Haiti is on its knees, we must get it to stand back up,” Preval said in a recent speech to private entrepreneurs.

Estimates of damage inflicted by the magnitude 7.0 quake, viewed by some as the most deadly natural disaster in recent history, range between $8 billion and $14 billion.

Participants in Wednesday’s conference will look to secure not only a major envelope of funds — an initial figure contemplates $3.8 billion over 18 months, much more for the longer term — but also a viable blueprint for Haiti’s successful future development.

This will try to tackle some of the restraints that have locked Haiti in a poverty trap for years.

Proposals include an urgent decentralization strategy to create jobs and wealth outside the capital of some 4 million people — more than a third of the country’s population — which has so monopolized national economic life that Haitians jokingly refer to it as the “Republic of Port-au-Prince.”

There are also calls to rally private investment to the reconstruction effort, for example in textile manufacturing, tourism, and agriculture, where cheap subsidized imports of rice and sugar have kept Haitian peasant farmers relegated to dirt-poor subsistence farming.

Supporters of Haiti, who include former U.S. President Bill Clinton, who spent his honeymoon there and is now the special United Nations coordinator for the relief effort, say the disaster provides an opportunity to “build back better.”

“This country has the best chance to escape its past that it’s ever had,” Clinton said last week in a visit to Haiti. “As horrible as this is, it gives them a chance to start again.”

STILL AN EMERGENCY OPERATION

But this hopeful vision must be set against the deep pessimism that seems to affect many ordinary Haitians, accustomed as they are to seeing the country’s resources, and foreign largesse, being monopolized by a small elite. The specter of corruption looms large in the national conscience.

“There might be some more money (from the donors), but those who need it won’t receive it,” said mother of three Gilene Morquette, as she jostled in a crush of women waiting to receive a Save the Children aid handout at a sprawling quake survivors’ camp in the city’s Petionville golf club.

Skepticism also gripped 47-year-old barber Raymond Martin as he showed reporters his destroyed barber shop in the ruined downtown city center. He lost a child in the quake.

“For Haiti to have a chance, the foreigners must be the ones who reconstruct,” he said. “I don’t want Haitians to govern, we should have a foreign protectorate here,” he said, touching off a debate on the still rubble-strewn street side.

There will be no foreign protectorate — donors and aid partners are careful to insist that Haiti’s government directs the reconstruction — but monitoring mechanisms are being included in plans to finance the rebuilding effort.

The World Bank is due to act as “fiscal agent” of a Multi-Donors Trust Fund to be created for Haiti.

But while the government and donors plan reconstruction, aid workers are urging them not to ignore the immediate needs of the more than 1 million homeless quake survivors who are still camped out precariously in streets and open spaces, vulnerable to the approaching rains and hurricane season.

“For us, this remains an emergency operation,” said Iain Logan, head of Haiti operations of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

He saw Haiti’s rebuilding as a bigger challenge even than the reconstruction after the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. “In my professional lifetime, we’ve never had to rebuild a capital city, on which the whole country was fundamentally based.”

The European Union and a coalition of U.S.-based humanitarian groups have indicated they are likely to pledge more than $2.7 billion for Haiti at the New York conference.

U.S. President Barack Obama has asked Congress for $2.8 billion in funds for Haiti relief and reconstruction costs.

But there is recognition this will be a long job. “No one walks away from the scenes of devastation I’ve seen … within 18 months. This is for the long haul,” said British International Development Minister Mike Foster, after a visit last week.

(Editing by Eric Beech)

Haiti, donors face huge task to ‘build back better’

“Retou ala Vi. Ayiti Pap Peri” (Back to life, Haiti will not die) reads the banner in Creole stretched up beside a crowded camp of earthquake survivors in the heart of the wrecked capital Port-au-Prince.

Life, in the form of bustling pedestrians, chaotic traffic and teeming street markets, has indeed bounced back in the city after the devastating Jan. 12 quake that killed maybe more than 300,000 and turned streets into jumbles of rubble.

But a massive task of reconstructing the quake-shattered capital and its dependent nation — a small Caribbean state that was already a byword for poverty in the Western Hemisphere — now faces Haiti’s government and donors when they meet in New York on Wednesday to pledge funds and agree to strategies.

President Rene Preval and the country’s foreign partners have stressed that the rebuilding should seek not just to put back what was lost — the destroyed buildings, schools and hospitals — but lift Haiti out of the cycle of instability and underdevelopment that has kept it mired in misery for decades.

“Haiti is on its knees, we must get it to stand back up,” Preval said in a recent speech to private entrepreneurs.

Estimates of damage inflicted by the magnitude 7.0 quake, viewed by some as the most deadly natural disaster in recent history, range between $8 billion and $14 billion.

Participants in Wednesday’s conference will look to secure not only a major envelope of funds — an initial figure contemplates $3.8 billion over 18 months, much more for the longer term — but also a viable blueprint for Haiti’s successful future development.

This will try to tackle some of the restraints that have locked Haiti in a poverty trap for years.

Proposals include an urgent decentralization strategy to create jobs and wealth outside the capital of some 4 million people — more than a third of the country’s population — which has so monopolized national economic life that Haitians jokingly refer to it as the “Republic of Port-au-Prince.”

There are also calls to rally private investment to the reconstruction effort, for example in textile manufacturing, tourism, and agriculture, where cheap subsidized imports of rice and sugar have kept Haitian peasant farmers relegated to dirt-poor subsistence farming.

Supporters of Haiti, who include former U.S. President Bill Clinton, who spent his honeymoon there and is now the special United Nations coordinator for the relief effort, say the disaster provides an opportunity to “build back better.”

“This country has the best chance to escape its past that it’s ever had,” Clinton said last week in a visit to Haiti. “As horrible as this is, it gives them a chance to start again.”

STILL AN EMERGENCY OPERATION

But this hopeful vision must be set against the deep pessimism that seems to affect many ordinary Haitians, accustomed as they are to seeing the country’s resources, and foreign largesse, being monopolized by a small elite. The specter of corruption looms large in the national conscience.

“There might be some more money (from the donors), but those who need it won’t receive it,” said mother of three Gilene Morquette, as she jostled in a crush of women waiting to receive a Save the Children aid handout at a sprawling quake survivors’ camp in the city’s Petionville golf club.

Skepticism also gripped 47-year-old barber Raymond Martin as he showed reporters his destroyed barber shop in the ruined downtown city center. He lost a child in the quake.

“For Haiti to have a chance, the foreigners must be the ones who reconstruct,” he said. “I don’t want Haitians to govern, we should have a foreign protectorate here,” he said, touching off a debate on the still rubble-strewn street side.

There will be no foreign protectorate — donors and aid partners are careful to insist that Haiti’s government directs the reconstruction — but monitoring mechanisms are being included in plans to finance the rebuilding effort.

The World Bank is due to act as “fiscal agent” of a Multi-Donors Trust Fund to be created for Haiti.

But while the government and donors plan reconstruction, aid workers are urging them not to ignore the immediate needs of the more than 1 million homeless quake survivors who are still camped out precariously in streets and open spaces, vulnerable to the approaching rains and hurricane season.

“For us, this remains an emergency operation,” said Iain Logan, head of Haiti operations of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

He saw Haiti’s rebuilding as a bigger challenge even than the reconstruction after the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. “In my professional lifetime, we’ve never had to rebuild a capital city, on which the whole country was fundamentally based.”

The European Union and a coalition of U.S.-based humanitarian groups have indicated they are likely to pledge more than $2.7 billion for Haiti at the New York conference.

U.S. President Barack Obama has asked Congress for $2.8 billion in funds for Haiti relief and reconstruction costs.

But there is recognition this will be a long job. “No one walks away from the scenes of devastation I’ve seen … within 18 months. This is for the long haul,” said British International Development Minister Mike Foster, after a visit last week.

(Editing by Eric Beech)

PREVIEW-Haiti, donors face huge task to ‘build back better’

* March 31 donors conference to fund Haiti reconstruction

Bonds

* Aim is not only to repair, but relaunch development

* Ordinary Haitians skeptical, worries over corruption

By Pascal Fletcher and Joseph Guyler Delva

PORT-AU-PRINCE, March 28 (Reuters) – “Retou ala Vi. Ayiti Pap Peri” (Back to life, Haiti will not die) reads the banner in Creole stretched up beside a crowded camp of earthquake survivors in the heart of the wrecked capital Port-au-Prince.

Life, in the form of bustling pedestrians, chaotic traffic and teeming street markets, has indeed bounced back in the city after the devastating Jan. 12 quake that killed maybe more than 300,000 and turned streets into jumbles of rubble.

But a massive task of reconstructing the quake-shattered capital and its dependent nation — a small Caribbean state that was already a byword for poverty in the Western Hemisphere — now faces Haiti’s government and donors when they meet in New York on Wednesday to pledge funds and agree to strategies.

President Rene Preval and the country’s foreign partners have stressed that the rebuilding should seek not just to put back what was lost — the destroyed buildings, schools and hospitals — but lift Haiti out of the cycle of instability and underdevelopment that has kept it mired in misery for decades.

“Haiti is on its knees, we must get it to stand back up,” Preval said in a recent speech to private entrepreneurs.

Estimates of damage inflicted by the magnitude 7.0 quake, viewed by some as the most deadly natural disaster in recent history, range between $8 billion and $14 billion.

Participants in Wednesday’s conference will look to secure not only a major envelope of funds — an initial figure contemplates $3.8 billion over 18 months, much more for the longer term — but also a viable blueprint for Haiti’s successful future development.

This will try to tackle some of the restraints that have locked Haiti in a poverty trap for years.

Proposals include an urgent decentralization strategy to create jobs and wealth outside the capital of some 4 million people — more than a third of the country’s population — which has so monopolized national economic life that Haitians jokingly refer to it as the “Republic of Port-au-Prince.”

There are also calls to rally private investment to the reconstruction effort, for example in textile manufacturing, tourism, and agriculture, where cheap subsidized imports of rice and sugar have kept Haitian peasant farmers relegated to dirt-poor subsistence farming.

Supporters of Haiti, who include former U.S. President Bill Clinton, who spent his honeymoon there and is now the special United Nations coordinator for the relief effort, say the disaster provides an opportunity to “build back better.”

“This country has the best chance to escape its past that it’s ever had,” Clinton said last week in a visit to Haiti. “As horrible as this is, it gives them a chance to start again.”

STILL AN EMERGENCY OPERATION

But this hopeful vision must be set against the deep pessimism that seems to affect many ordinary Haitians, accustomed as they are to seeing the country’s resources, and foreign largesse, being monopolized by a small elite. The specter of corruption looms large in the national conscience.

“There might be some more money (from the donors), but those who need it won’t receive it,” said mother of three Gilene Morquette, as she jostled in a crush of women waiting to receive a Save the Children aid handout at a sprawling quake survivors’ camp in the city’s Petionville golf club.

Skepticism also gripped 47-year-old barber Raymond Martin as he showed reporters his destroyed barber shop in the ruined downtown city center. He lost a child in the quake.

“For Haiti to have a chance, the foreigners must be the ones who reconstruct,” he said. “I don’t want Haitians to govern, we should have a foreign protectorate here,” he said, touching off a debate on the still rubble-strewn street side.

There will be no foreign protectorate — donors and aid partners are careful to insist that Haiti’s government directs the reconstruction — but monitoring mechanisms are being included in plans to finance the rebuilding effort.

The World Bank is due to act as “fiscal agent” of a Multi-Donors Trust Fund to be created for Haiti.

But while the government and donors plan reconstruction, aid workers are urging them not to ignore the immediate needs of the more than 1 million homeless quake survivors who are still camped out precariously in streets and open spaces, vulnerable to the approaching rains and hurricane season.

“For us, this remains an emergency operation,” said Iain Logan, head of Haiti operations of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

He saw Haiti’s rebuilding as a bigger challenge even than the reconstruction after the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. “In my professional lifetime, we’ve never had to rebuild a capital city, on which the whole country was fundamentally based.”

The European Union and a coalition of U.S.-based humanitarian groups have indicated they are likely to pledge more than $2.7 billion for Haiti at the New York conference.

U.S. President Barack Obama has asked Congress for $2.8 billion in funds for Haiti relief and reconstruction costs.

But there is recognition this will be a long job. “No one walks away from the scenes of devastation I’ve seen … within 18 months. This is for the long haul,” said British International Development Minister Mike Foster, after a visit last week. (Editing by Eric Beech)

Haiti, donors face huge task to “build back better”

(Reuters) – “Retou ala Vi. Ayiti Pap Peri” (Back to life, Haiti will not die) reads the banner in Creole stretched up beside a crowded camp of earthquake survivors in the heart of the wrecked capital Port-au-Prince.

World | Natural Disasters

Life, in the form of bustling pedestrians, chaotic traffic and teeming street markets, has indeed bounced back in the city after the devastating January 12 quake that killed maybe more than 300,000 and turned streets into jumbles of rubble.

But a massive task of reconstructing the quake-shattered capital and its dependent nation — a small Caribbean state that was already a byword for poverty in the Western Hemisphere — now faces Haiti’s government and donors when they meet in New York on Wednesday to pledge funds and agree to strategies.

President Rene Preval and the country’s foreign partners have stressed that the rebuilding should seek not just to put back what was lost — the destroyed buildings, schools and hospitals — but lift Haiti out of the cycle of instability and underdevelopment that has kept it mired in misery for decades.

“Haiti is on its knees, we must get it to stand back up,” Preval said in a recent speech to private entrepreneurs.

Estimates of damage inflicted by the magnitude 7.0 quake, viewed by some as the most deadly natural disaster in recent history, range between $8 billion and $14 billion.

Participants in Wednesday’s conference will look to secure not only a major envelope of funds — an initial figure contemplates $3.8 billion over 18 months, much more for the longer term — but also a viable blueprint for Haiti’s successful future development.

This will try to tackle some of the restraints that have locked Haiti in a poverty trap for years.

Proposals include an urgent decentralization strategy to create jobs and wealth outside the capital of some 4 million people — more than a third of the country’s population — which has so monopolized national economic life that Haitians jokingly refer to it as the “Republic of Port-au-Prince.”

There are also calls to rally private investment to the reconstruction effort, for example in textile manufacturing, tourism, and agriculture, where cheap subsidized imports of rice and sugar have kept Haitian peasant farmers relegated to dirt-poor subsistence farming.

Supporters of Haiti, who include former U.S. President Bill Clinton, who spent his honeymoon there and is now the special United Nations coordinator for the relief effort, say the disaster provides an opportunity to “build back better.”

“This country has the best chance to escape its past that it’s ever had,” Clinton said last week in a visit to Haiti. “As horrible as this is, it gives them a chance to start again.”

STILL AN EMERGENCY OPERATION

But this hopeful vision must be set against the deep pessimism that seems to affect many ordinary Haitians, accustomed as they are to seeing the country’s resources, and foreign largesse, being monopolized by a small elite. The specter of corruption looms large in the national conscience.

“There might be some more money (from the donors), but those who need it won’t receive it,” said mother of three Gilene Morquette, as she jostled in a crush of women waiting to receive a Save the Children aid handout at a sprawling quake survivors’ camp in the city’s Petionville golf club.

Skepticism also gripped 47-year-old barber Raymond Martin as he showed reporters his destroyed barber shop in the ruined downtown city center. He lost a child in the quake.

“For Haiti to have a chance, the foreigners must be the ones who reconstruct,” he said. “I don’t want Haitians to govern, we should have a foreign protectorate here,” he said, touching off a debate on the still rubble-strewn street side.

There will be no foreign protectorate — donors and aid partners are careful to insist that Haiti’s government directs the reconstruction — but monitoring mechanisms are being included in plans to finance the rebuilding effort.

The World Bank is due to act as “fiscal agent” of a Multi-Donors Trust Fund to be created for Haiti.

But while the government and donors plan reconstruction, aid workers are urging them not to ignore the immediate needs of the more than 1 million homeless quake survivors who are still camped out precariously in streets and open spaces, vulnerable to the approaching rains and hurricane season.

“For us, this remains an emergency operation,” said Iain Logan, head of Haiti operations of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

He saw Haiti’s rebuilding as a bigger challenge even than the reconstruction after the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. “In my professional lifetime, we’ve never had to rebuild a capital city, on which the whole country was fundamentally based.”

The European Union and a coalition of U.S.-based humanitarian groups have indicated they are likely to pledge more than $2.7 billion for Haiti at the New York conference.

U.S. President Barack Obama has asked Congress for $2.8 billion in funds for Haiti relief and reconstruction costs.

But there is recognition this will be a long job. “No one walks away from the scenes of devastation I’ve seen … within 18 months. This is for the long haul,” said British International Development Minister Mike Foster, after a visit last week.

(Editing by Eric Beech)

Militant and hate group Internet use grows: report

(Reuters) – The use of social networking sites such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube by militant and hate groups grew by almost 20 percent in the past year, a report by the Simon Wiesenthal Center found on Monday.

World | Technology | Media | Natural Disasters

The study, using research by the center and tips from the public, found more than 11,500 social networks, websites, forums and blogs promoting violence, anti-Semitism, homophobia, hate music and “terrorism,” an increase from 10,000 last year.

“The numbers are probably, at the end of the day, multiples of that,” said Rabbi Abraham Cooper, the center’s associate dean who has been researching hate on the Internet since 1995. “That should be taken as a low ball figure.”

Extremists also were heavily promoting online the idea of operating as so-called “lone wolves” rather than as part of a group, the human rights group named after the late Nazi hunter Simon Wiesenthal said.

Cooper told a news conference examples of hate on the Internet included videos of extremists appealing for recruits and showing how to make improvised explosive devices. Online games ranged from bombing Haitian earthquake survivors to shooting illegal immigrants and gays. Facebook groups included “national kick a ginger day” and “I love curry bashing.”

“While children are taught that ‘sticks and stones may break your bones but words will never hurt you,’ it’s not always true,” Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney, from New York, told reporters. “Terrorism and intolerance start with words, but they grow into actions.”

(Reporting by Michelle Nichols, editing by Ellen Wulfhorst and Alan Elsner)

CHILE QUAKE: World Vision Begins Relief Efforts; Transport, Communications Remain Key Challenges

SANTIAGO, Chile, March 1 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — World Vision began
distributing hundreds of blankets and some water containers to Santiago’s
earthquake survivors over the weekend as it prepared to start an extensive
response in the hardest hit areas south of the capital. Many of the
communities in Chile where the aid group already works–including Lota City,
Temuco, Concepcion and other areas in the Bio Bio region and the La Araucania
region–were close to the devastating quake’s epicenter.

Late Sunday, World Vision flew a team of six relief and logistics experts from
Santiago to Concepcion to assess the severity of the damage and to verify
the safety of staff and community members that have so far been cut off from
communication or road access. The team will also open a second operations
center in the south to coordinate with the agency’s relief teams in Santiago.

The Christian humanitarian organization has prepositioned relief supplies in
its Santiago warehouse, and plans to purchase additional high-priority
supplies in country, including water tanks, water purification tablets,
cooking items, hygiene kits, blankets and lanterns. These items will be rushed
to communities in the Concepcion area as soon as air transport can be
arranged. Meanwhile, the agency is working to bring in additional supplies
from its regional warehouses, including one in La Paz, Bolivia.

In the five communities just outside Santiago where World Vision is
responding, aid workers reported that many houses had collapsed completely,
while others were still standing but too damaged for people to safely inhabit.
There was no water or electricity service Sunday. Children were acting fearful
of closed-in areas and hundreds of families were still sleeping on the
streets, the relief teams reported. The start of the new school term has also
been postponed because of expected structural damage to school buildings.

While the needs in areas south of the capital are expected to be far more
critical, children and families in the Santiago region require food, first
aid and hygiene kits, water, water containers, disposable diapers, plastic
sheeting, candles, batteries, flashlights, blankets and sleeping bags, staff
said. Survivors also need medical attention, damage evaluations of their homes
and psychosocial support for children.

“We are extremely concerned about the emotional impact of so many aftershocks
on children. Not only the physical needs, but the psychosocial needs of
children in the quake zone will be a priority once the full extent of the
needs are known and we can begin delivering much-needed supplies,” said
Tatiana Benavides, World Vision’s national director in Chile.

World Vision has worked in Chile for 30 years and has more than 100 staff in
the country, reaching about 100,000 children and adults with education,
microfinance, job training, and sustainable development programs. The public
can help by visiting www.worldvision.org, calling 1.888.56.CHILD or texting
“CHILE” to 20222.

World Vision is a Christian humanitarian organization dedicated to working
with children, families and their communities worldwide to reach their full
potential by tackling the causes of poverty and injustice. World Vision serves
all people, regardless of religion, race, ethnicity or gender.

SOURCE World Vision

Rachel Wolff, Sr. Director, World Vision News Bureau, Media Relations, World
Vision (U.S.), +1-253-394-2214 (24/7 mobile), +1-253-815-2072 (office), or
Skype: globalwolff, or Twitter: WorldVisionNews

Brain function of earthquake survivors gets acutely affected

Washington, Sep 1 (ANI): The earthquake that jolted Wenchuan, China, in 2008 has had an acute impact on the brain function of physically healthy survivors, and even poses a risk to their mental health, according a new research.

Working with collaborators from universities in China, the US and Liverpool, researchers at the Institute of Psychiatry focussed on the survivors of the earthquake that occurred on May 12 last year.

The researchers wanted to gain a better understanding of how functional brain systems adapt to severe emotional stress.

Previous animal studies have demonstrated the importance of limbic, paralimbic, striatal, and prefrontal structures of the brain in stress and fear responses.

Human studies, which have focused primarily on patients with clinically established posttraumatic stress disorders, have reported abnormalities in similar brain structures.

But not much is known about potential alterations of brain function in trauma survivors shortly after traumatic events such as an earthquake.

The epicentre of the devastating earthquake was in Wenchuan, in the Sichuan Province of China.

The tremor measured 8.0 on the Richter scale and severely affected many geographical regions including Yingxiu, Wenchuan, Dujiangyan, and Shifang, where 45 million people were directly affected.

The researchers found that a significant proportion of the survivors (around 20 per cent) are likely to develop stress-related disorders, such as acute stress disorder (ASD) and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

“Given the serious and persistent impact of these highly prevalent psychiatric disorders, it is vital to develop a better understanding of the alterations of cerebral function evident in the early stages of adaptation to trauma. Such knowledge may lead to a better understanding of posttraumatic responses and the development of more effective early interventions,” said Dr Andrea Mechelli from the Institute of Psychiatry at King’s College London.

The researchers used a method known as ‘resting-state fMRI’ to examine 44 healthy survivors and 32 controls shortly after the massive psychological trauma.

They found that significant alterations in brain function similar to those observed in posttraumatic stress disorders could be seen shortly after major traumatic experiences, highlighting the need for early evaluation and intervention for the survivors.

The results of the study show that individuals experiencing severe emotional trauma showed hyperactivity in certain areas of the brain, and decreased functional connectivity in others, shortly after the massively traumatic Wenchuan earthquake.

Particularly, the findings indicated that traumatic experiences affect not only regional function but also dynamic interactions within brain networks.

It is not clear if this pattern of brain alteration remains the same or evolves further over the following weeks or months after the traumatic experiences.

“A better understanding of the impact of traumatic events on brain function may help us identify those in need of early treatment and reduce the long-term psychological impact in trauma survivors of national disasters, military conflict, and other causes of severe emotional distress,” said Mechelli.

The results of the study have been published in PNAS online. (ANI)

Berlusconi says Italy’s quake victims should see calamity as ‘camping trip’

L’Aquila (Italy), Apr.8 (ANI): Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has advised traumatised earthquake survivors to view living in emergency tent accommodation as like being on a “camping weekend”.
His statement is unlikely to go down well with an estimated 17,000 people who have been made homeless by the powerful earthquake which struck the Abruzzo region of central Italy on Monday, with many of them enduring freezing temperatures in tent cities put up by the army, reports The Telegraph.

There are still not enough tents to accommodate all the homeless and some people have spent the last two nights sleeping in their cars, struggling to stay warm in an upland area which is surrounded by snow-capped mountains.

Berlusconi appeared to dismiss the discomfort, telling German television station N-TV: “They have everything they need, they have medical care, hot food… Of course, their current lodgings are a bit temporary. But they should see it like a weekend of camping.”

Berlusconi made the remarks while touring some of the tented encampments that have sprung up around the city of L’Aquila, which was severely damaged by the quake.

His breezy assurance that the homeless had all they need was in stark contrast to the experience of many survivors.

As the death toll from Italy’s devastating earthquake passed 250, more than 200 people were last night unable to find shelter at camps because tents were already packed with people.

“Shame on you!” screamed a woman at one of the tent cities.

The Italian government estimates that at least 1.3 billion euros will be needed to repair or rebuild the 10,000 buildings damaged in the quake. (ANI)

Italian earthquake survivors recall their ’20 seconds of hell’

L’Aquila (Italy), Apr.7 (ANI): Survivors who lived through the earthquake in the central Italian town of L’Aquila said the devastation was “like 20 seconds of hell”. he death toll has risen to 179, as rescue workers used mechanical diggers and their bare hands to search through the night for survivors.

At least 34 people are still missing, according to officials in the medieval mountain town located 60 miles east of Rome, reports The Telegraph.

L’Aquila resident Maria Francesco said: “It was the apocalypse, 20 minutes of hell, our house collapsed. It’s destroyed, and there’s nothing left to recover.”

“I only remember this huge rumble and then someone dragged me out, but I don’t know what happened to my wife and three-year-old son,” said 35-year-old Stefano Esposito.

Around 100 people have been pulled from the rubble but hopes are dimming of finding any more alive.

The quake, measuring between 5.8 and 6.3 on the Richter scale, struck shortly after 3:30 a.m. on Monday, when most people were asleep.

Houses, apartment blocks and medieval churches were severely damaged in L’Aquila and surrounding villages.

Aftershocks were felt well into the night, frightening already shaken inhabitants.

“It is a serious disaster. Now we must rebuild and that will require huge sums of money,” said Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who declared a national emergency and visited the disaster zone. (ANI)

Italian earthquake survivors recall their ’20 seconds of hell’

L’Aquila (Italy), Apr.7 (ANI): Survivors who lived through the earthquake in the central Italian town of L’Aquila said the devastation was “like 20 seconds of hell”. he death toll has risen to 179, as rescue workers used mechanical diggers and their bare hands to search through the night for survivors.

At least 34 people are still missing, according to officials in the medieval mountain town located 60 miles east of Rome, reports The Telegraph.

L’Aquila resident Maria Francesco said: “It was the apocalypse, 20 minutes of hell, our house collapsed. It’s destroyed, and there’s nothing left to recover.”

“I only remember this huge rumble and then someone dragged me out, but I don’t know what happened to my wife and three-year-old son,” said 35-year-old Stefano Esposito.

Around 100 people have been pulled from the rubble but hopes are dimming of finding any more alive.

The quake, measuring between 5.8 and 6.3 on the Richter scale, struck shortly after 3:30 a.m. on Monday, when most people were asleep.

Houses, apartment blocks and medieval churches were severely damaged in L’Aquila and surrounding villages.

Aftershocks were felt well into the night, frightening already shaken inhabitants.

“It is a serious disaster. Now we must rebuild and that will require huge sums of money,” said Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who declared a national emergency and visited the disaster zone. (ANI)