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'Why again?' panicked Haitians cry

An elderly Haitian earthquake victim waits to get food as US Marines camp out in a field in Leogan on January 20, 2010 following a massive 7.0-magnitude quake that shattered the country. Some 11,000 US military personnel are currently supporting operations in Haiti and from US Navy and Coast Guard vessels offshore, as part of President Barack Obama's pledge to use "every element" of US power to help the devastated Caribbean neighbor. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Staff Writers
Port-Au-Prince (AFP) Jan 20, 2010
Panicked Haitians screamed and trembled with fear Wednesday as a massive aftershock rattled the capital, some blaming God, others fearing they were cursed -- and all asking when the suffering will end.

The shaking lasted several seconds as Port-au-Prince was rocked at 6:03 am (1103 GMT) by a 6.1-magnitude earthquake, the largest aftershock since the initial January 12 quake, which measured 7.0.

In Petionville, in the east of the capital, residents ran through the streets screaming. In front of the hotel Kinam, terrified survivors expressed relief no one had been killed. "Thank you eternal Lord, thank you eternal Lord," broken voices repeated in Creole.

The aftershock knocked down several buildings already damaged by the catastrophic quake eight days ago. The surviving wall of the main cathedral collapsed, complete with a stained-glass window of Jesus.

"All Haitians are going to die because they are cursed," said a homeless mother camped amidst the squalor of the Port-au-Prince rubble, where countless bodies still lay in their dusty tombs.

"I was in the middle of eating and then things shook very strongly," said Sylliona Gyna, a heavily pregnant young woman in a squalid camp of 6,000 survivors at Place Saint-Pierre. "People were shouting, 'My God, My God, why again?'

"Everyone knows it's not finished. I believe everyone will die. It's nature. It's not God, God is not wicked," she said.

A woman interrupted her: "Yes it is him, yes it is God," she said, pointing her finger towards the heavens. "God wants to destroy all Haitians because they are bad, because they are cursed."

The woman, Eleude Joseph, a mother of two, was in shock after the latest quake, which pushed many anxious Haitians -- already haunted by grim memories of a disaster they find impossible to fathom -- even closer to the edge.

Louis Saurel, an artist with paintings on display, was not sure he could explain it all. "I think it is God who wills all this, but I am not certain. Some people say that it is nuclear tests. It's possible, I know nothing."

A resigned Patrick Damiens Boucherea explained how he had been hoping to meet up on Wednesday with 20 workers to clear away some of the endless ruins.

"They called me after the tremor to say: 'Engineer, we cannot come.' They are frightened more buildings will collapse and they don't want to leave their homes."

A three-story house next to the French embassy in downtown Port-au-Prince that had been badly damaged by the initial quake collapsed about 40 minutes after the latest huge tremor.

A dozen or so one-time occupants, now camping a few meters from the building, were unhurt but watched in dismay as the edifice came tumbling down.

"The house was still standing but since it had cracks people no longer lived inside," one of them, Antony Lamothe, told AFP.

In Carrefour, a suburb on the outskirts of the capital, a French medical worker saw another two buildings collapse, again mercifully claiming no casualties.

Aftershocks of varying strengths have punctuated the lives of the terrified residents of Port-au-Prince since the January 12 quake in which at least 75,000 people were killed and one million left homeless.

The day after the catastrophe, rescuers trying to save a baby from the rubble in central Port-au-Prince beat a hasty retreat as the first main aftershock caused widespread panic.

The same evening, further jolts sent tens of thousands of Haitians rushing for the high ground fearing their capital would be drowned in another tsunami. A preacher, shouting to the panicked masses, announced, "the end of the world."

On Saturday, in the capital's biggest slum of Cite-Soleil, the ground shook as dozens of Haitians went to fetch water from under a bridge. Everyone fled in panic before returning with trepidation after the tremors ceased.

"As I have a diploma, my workers always ask me how long it is going to last," said Boucherea. "But I know nothing."

In Petionville, Midi Enock said he "hopes that God will bring it all to an end." A large sticker on his car's windscreen proclaims: "God is Great."



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Haitians pray in ruins as quake toll soars
Port-Au-Prince (AFP) Jan 17, 2010
Despairing Haitians prayed in church ruins Sunday as rescuers raced against time to unearth quake survivors and the UN vowed to speed up desperately needed supplies of food, water and medicine. The government said 70,000 bodies had been buried in mass graves since the 7.0 earthquake flattened much of the impoverished Caribbean nation on January 12, triggering a massive humanitarian crisis. ... read more







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