The Pak Banker

10 days later, Haiti earthquake victims struggle to cope

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LES CAYES, HAITI: Survivors of the earthquake that killed 2,200 people when it struck Haiti 10 days ago are wavering between feeling resigned to the destructio­n and fighting for help as they struggle to cope with their daily needs.

"But it hasn't been calm yet, because there is still shaking," he said, speaking in the southweste­rn town of Les Cayes, which is near the epicenter of the August 14 quake.

"Just this morning there was a strong aftershock," he said. "I was outside, but that didn't stop me from running."

Traffic in downtown Les Cayes is in full swing and the city almost appears to be running like normal-if not for the several side streets that are nearly entirely destroyed. After the 7.2-magnitude earthquake, residents have been sleeping on the ground on thin mattresses dragged outside their homes, many of which are severely damaged if not entirely ruined.

Haitian authoritie­s have warned earthquake victims against congregati­ng in public, but any open spaces in Les Cayes are slowly being transforme­d into informal camps as the worst-hit families take refuge there, despite the terrible conditions. Gas stations that still have fuel are overrun with waiting vehicles and the few open bank branches have queues that stretch outside into the sun.

"We have to get out again, even if we are victims," said John, whose brother died in the collapse of their family home. The young man, who is a used phone seller, doesn't believe the authoritie­s' promises that help is coming.

"They could send 100,000 trucks-the victims would remain in the same situation," he said. "Only a minority will receive (what they need) and the majority wouldn't get anything, because things are not being done in order or discipline," he said. "The weakest cannot go and fight in the distributi­on (lines)."

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