Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

724 die in Haiti quake, tropical storm looms

- Reuters

PORT-AU-PRINCE: The death toll from a devastatin­g earthquake in Haiti rose to 724 on Sunday as rescue workers scrambled to find survivors buried under buildings a day after the 7.2 magnitude quake and as a tropical storm bore down on the Caribbean nation.

The quake flattened hundreds of homes and buildings in a Caribbean nation which is still clawing its way back from another major temblor 11 years ago and reeling from the assassinat­ion of its president last month.

Southweste­rn Haiti bore the brunt of the blow, especially in the region in and around the city of Les Cayes. In a news conference on Sunday, Haitian officials said the toll from the disaster had climbed to 724 as the rescue work continued.

Churches, hotels, hospitals and schools were badly damaged or destroyed, while the walls of a prison were rent open by the violent shudders that convulsed Haiti.

“We need to show a lot of solidarity with the emergency,” said Haiti’s Prime Minister Ariel Henry, a neurosurge­on who was thrust to the forefront of the troubled country after the assassinat­ion of President Jovenel Moise on July 7.

The rescue efforts are set to be made more complicate­d by the arrival of Tropical Storm Grace, which is set to lash Haiti with heavy rainfall on Monday. There was also the possibilit­y of flash flooding, the US National Hurricane Center said.

At the Vatican, Pope Francis urged nations to send quick aid. “May solidarity from everyone lighten the consequenc­es of the tragedy,” he told pilgrims and tourists at his Sunday blessing in St Peter’s Square.

The United States sent vital supplies and deployed a 65-person urban search-and-rescue team with specialise­d equipment, said Samantha Power, the administra­tor of the United States Agency for Internatio­nal

Developmen­t.

Some Haitians spent Saturday night sleeping in the open, traumatise­d by memories of the magnitude 7 quake in 2010 that struck far closer to the sprawling capital, Port-au-prince, and killed tens of thousands of people. Access to the worst-hit areas was complicate­d by a deteriorat­ion in law and order that has left key access roads in the hands of gangs, although unconfirme­d reports on social media suggested they would let aid pass.

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