Tuesday January 7, 2025
SNc Channels:

Search
About Salem-News.com

 

Jan-13-2010 21:00printcommentsVideo

UN Pledges Support for Haiti Quake Victims

Includes several of the most recently posted videos on the earthquake in Haiti.

William J. Clinton
William J. Clinton, United Nations Special Envoy for Haiti and former President of the United States of America, briefs the General Assembly on the situation in Haiti, following the earthquake that devastated Haiti's capital, Port-au-Prince, on 12 January. He described the situation in Haiti, where the UN's headquarters have collapsed and many personnel are unaccounted for, as a 'humanitarian emergency'. UN Photo/Paulo Filgueiras

(NEW YORK) - The 192-member United Nations General Assembly and the 15-member Security Council observed a minute of silence today as they stood in solidarity with the countless earthquake victims in Haiti, with both bodies pledging support for international relief efforts.

Outside UN Headquarters in New York the Organization’s blue and white flag flew at half mast mourning the disaster’s victims, who included 16 UN peacekeepers known to have died and many others who remain unaccounted for.

“The members of the Security Council highly commend Member States’ efforts to assist in search-and-rescue efforts and urge the international community to continue such assistance as the Haitian people face the challenges of rescue, recovery and reconstruction in the months ahead,” the Council said in a press statement read by Ambassador Zhang Yesui of China, which holds the rotating presidency for January.

“They express their strong support for the Government and the people of Haiti in the aftermath of this devastating earthquake, and their strong support for international efforts to assist Haiti during the immediate and critical rescue and recovery efforts of the coming days,” the statement added.

The General Assembly held an urgent informal plenary meeting attended by both Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and former United States President Bill Clinton, who is the UN Special Envoy for Haiti.

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon: Haiti Earthquake Update (13 January 2010, 6:00 p.m. in NY)

“The challenges are complex, the needs are great,” Mr. Ban told delegates. Both leaders appealed for immediate international aid, but stressed the need to send only priority items such as food and potable water facilities to avoid a logistical logjam.

Mr. Clinton stressed there is a great desire around the world to help the Haitian people and he encouraged people to donate money for the relief effort. “The most important thing individuals can do, who care, is to send cash – even if it’s a dollar, or two dollars.”

Opening the session Ambassador Michel Tommo Monthe of Cameroon, the Assembly’s Acting President, called the disaster “a tragedy of immense proportions” with grave humanitarian consequences.

“The situation is overwhelming,” he said. “Haiti is neither equipped nor does it have the resources to meet the challenge. It requires the full support and concerted action by the entire international community. The United Nations and other actors are already in motion. We need to mobilize all our resources and to coordinate all our efforts to help the people of Haiti in the most urgent and effective manner.”

After Mr. Ban and Mr. Clinton made brief speeches, delegates from Member State after Member State rose to express their condolences and pledge their support for efforts to help the Haitian people overcome this latest natural disaster to hit their homeland following last year’s devastating floods and hurricanes.

In a statement issued by his spokesman, Assembly President Ali Treki called on all Member States “to deploy all possible efforts to urgently assist the people of Haiti” in their moment of need.

He further urged “the institutions of the UN system and the entire international community to remain fully engaged in support of the Haitian people in this tragedy.”

United Nations, New York, 13 January 2009 - One day after the hearthquake in Haiti, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon updated UN correspondents on the situation in Haiti. The press encounter took place following the briefing the Secretary-General gave at the urgent informal plenary meeting of the General Assembly.

Venezuela, America and Australia first to send teams of rescue workers and supplies to devastated Haiti, but officials call for more aid:

"CBS News RAW": Crewmembers of Coast Guard Air Station Clearwater conducted a flyover to assess damage of Haiti following an earthquake:

Hundreds are feared dead in Haiti after the strongest earthquake to hit the country in over two hundred years. The island, considered the poorest country in the Western hemisphere, is said to be suffering 'a catastrophe of major proportions.' Tens of thousands of people are now homeless after 7.0 magnitude quake and the Presidential Palace and the UN headquarters are in ruins. There's been a united plea for international aid and hundreds or even thousands are estimated to have died in the tragedy:

Estimates of the number of dead from yesterday's quake in Haiti are now running into the hundreds of thousands. AP photographers have captured the devastation:

The Salvation Army's director of disaster services Bob Poff says he was driving down a mountainside when the 7.0-magnitude earthquake struck Haiti. Poff says he had never been so scared in his life:

Raymond Joseph, Haitian Ambassador to the United States, speaks to the press on Jan. 13 about the 7.0 earthquake that hit the impoverished country on the afternoon of Jan. 12. By Anna Uhls/The Washington Post:




Comments Leave a comment on this story.
Name:

All comments and messages are approved by people and self promotional links or unacceptable comments are denied.



Carlomy Jean-Baptiste January 14, 2010 3:00 pm (Pacific time)

Haiti is my country.fortunately my wife and I work for Hospital Albert Schweitzer in Deschapelles. we are alive, and our daughter is also safe by the grace of God. I will do all we can to save life of hundred victim of the earthquake. A lot of my people is dead. but hope that the rest will have access to live again even if the condition is become worst. I can't support them all because the cause is wild. the good thing that I can see and hear is: we are not alone. The rest of the world community is with us. Thank you all for your help to the survivor of that poor country. We have hope again. Don't say that I am sorry for our cause, but keep helping those poorest victims as you can to get live.

[Return to Top]
©2025 Salem-News.com. All opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Salem-News.com.


Articles for January 12, 2010 | Articles for January 13, 2010 | Articles for January 14, 2010
Sean Flynn was a photojournalist in Vietnam, taken captive in 1970 in Cambodia and never seen again.

Special Section: Truth telling news about marijuana related issues and events.


googlec507860f6901db00.html
Annual Hemp Festival & Event Calendar

The NAACP of the Willamette Valley