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Top U.N. Envoy In Haiti Killed In Quake
The Chief of the U.N.'s Haiti Mission was among those confirmed killed in Tuesday's quake, Haitian President Rene Preval said Wednesday, while more than 100 other U.N. staffers were missing in the rubble of the collapsed U.N. headquarters.
Nearly 40 other U.N. staff are also unaccounted for in other damaged buildings.
Preval confirmed an earlier report that Hedi Annabi, a career U.N. diplomat from Tunisia, had died. Annabi was meeting with a Chinese delegation at the time of the magnitude 7.0 earthquake. Others at the meeting are still unaccounted for.
U.N. peacekeeping chief Alain Le Roy said "less than 10" people have been pulled out, and he could confirm "less than five" deaths.
He would not confirm French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner's report that everyone in the five-story U.N. building appeared to have died.
Helen Clark, head of the U.N. Development Program, said the building adjacent to its office collapsed and 38 of its staff members are unaccounted for.
Le Roy said the Hotel Montana, the main hotel where some U.N. staff were living, also collapsed.
The U.N. headquarters building had been constructed in the 1960s with reinforced concrete, and was previously the Christopher Hotel.
Le Roy also refused to confirm reports that Brazilian, Jordanian and Chinese peacekeepers were killed, saying the U.N. thinks only "a very small number" of peacekeepers were killed because their buildings did not collapse.
"In Port au Prince we have now 3,000 forces. They are there to secure the airport, the port and the main buildings, and patrolling. That is already happening," Le Roy said.
Brazil's army said at least 11 Brazilian soldiers were killed, nine injured and seven were missing, and Jordan's official news agency said three of its peacekeepers were killed and 21 were injured.
A state newspaper in China said eight Chinese peacekeepers were known dead and 10 were missing — though officials later said the information was not confirmed.
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More than 10,000 U.N. staff
The U.N.'s Haitian mission — spread across the country — includes 7,000 peacekeeping troops, 2,000 international police, 490 international civilian staffers, 1,200 local civilian staffers and 200 U.N. volunteers, he said. The force was brought in after a bloody 2004 rebellion following decades of violence and poverty in the nation.
Le Roy said one good piece of news is that an early morning assessment found that the airport "is fully operational" which means planes carrying desperately needed relief can start arriving quickly.
"Initial reconnaissance and aerial assessments have been undertaken," said U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. "Buildings and infrastructure were heavily damaged throughout the capital. Basic services such as water and electricity have collapsed almost entirely. ... Medical facilities have been inundated with injured."
Ban said U.N. troops worked through the night to reach those trapped under the rubble at the U.N. headquarters building and have begun clearing some of the main roads in Port-au-Prince "which will allow assistance and rescuers to reach those in need."
U.N. Team dispatched
The secretary-general urged the international community "to come to Haiti's aid in this hour of need" and announced that the U.N. would provide $10 million for relief from its emergency fund. A U.N. emergency response team will start arriving in Haiti later Wednesday to coordinate humanitarian relief efforts, the U.N. said.
Ban said he has been "in urgent contact" with the U.S. government and requested logistical support, heavy equipment and trained rescue and assistance teams.
The secretary-general said he was sending Assistant Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Edmond Mulet, who previously headed the Haiti mission, to Port-au-Prince "as soon as possible" to oversee the U.N. rescue operation and help manage the mission.
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Sources: AP, MSNBC, Google Maps
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