Situation still severe for the Haitians

Devon Root is a native of Cornwall, and the daughter of Mike and Laurie Root. The 25-year-old graduate of Housatonic Valley Regional High School is a nurse and had worked in the emergency room at St. Francis Hospital in Hartford. She arrived in Haiti on Jan. 8 — just days before the earthquake — on a trip sponsored by the Norwich-based Haitian Health Foundation.

This update was sent from Jeremie, Haiti (about 100 miles north of Port au Prince), on Jan. 21.

It has been nine days since the earthquake, and the situation worsens each day.

The United Nations estimates that several hundred people are arriving each day in Jeremie via “machine,� either truck or bus. The trip from Port au Prince to Jeremie is usually 12 hours. People now must pay triple price to get from Port au Prince to Les Cayes. In Les Cayes people are boarding “machines� sent from Jeremie for free.

The road is treacherous. There have been reports of these vehicles breaking down and accidents en route. Hundreds of people are walking. People of Jeremie are willing to drive to Les Cayes to get people; however, there is no fuel.

On Sunday, the boat that makes a once-weekly trip between Jeremie and Port au Prince returned carrying approximately 1,500 people.  

It took several days to gather enough gas to send the boat back to Port au Prince and then several more days for enough gas to be found in Port au Prince for the return trip.

The boat (capacity 1,500) returned this morning carrying between 2,500 and 3,000 people. A second boat, the “cement boat,� arrived midmorning carrying at least another 1,000 people.

A caravan of 20 “machinesâ€�  left Port au Prince this morning, each carrying at least 60 people. They will come directly to Jeremie, without stopping in Les Cayes. They are expected to arrive around 6 p.m.

The prison in Port au Prince collapsed. The United Nations has set up a road block at the one entrance into Jeremie. The U.N. and police presence is strong on the wharf. Up to 20 escaped prisoners have been rearrested here. Two of my co-workers have reported attempted home invasions in the night.

In Port au Prince, people have been sleeping in the streets with little food or water for more than a week. Everyone is undernourished and dehydrated. They have had open fractures and terrible internal and external injuries that haven’t yet been tended. Children, otherwise unharmed by the earthquake, are arriving with pneumonia. I will spare you the horrific details.

We have yet to receive any outside help and the resources of Jeremie are quickly being depleted.

Our biggest need now may be fuel. There are no power plants, everything is powered by generators. If they cannot be run, there is no electricity — no electricity for lights, to pump water out of cisterns, for x-ray machines and surgical tools.

Fuel is needed so that people can be transported from Port au Prince to Jeremie, then from Jeremie throughout the Grand Anse region to their families.

The need for medical supplies and food is a given.

The spirit of the Haitian people is amazing. In a word: community.

The residents of Jeremie and the entire Grand Anse region have opened their doors. Women who have hardly enough food for their families are bringing pots full of food to the wharf to distribute to strangers. Children take a mouthful of water then help their younger siblings to drink. The collaboration is nothing short of inspiring.

All this being said, I am safe and have enough food and water.

Your continued support has made all the difference. Thank you.

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