Haiti Ambassador Calls Earthquake 'Disaster of Major Proportion'

Experts estimate death toll from 7.0 earthquake could be in in the thousands.

ByABC News via logo
January 13, 2010, 7:40 AM

Jan 13, 2009— -- Haiti has barely begun to assess the devastation caused by the biggest earthquake to rock the area in centuries, but the U.S. ambassador to the poverty-stricken Caribbean nation called it a "disaster of major proportion."

Ambassador Raymond Joseph told "Good Morning America" today that he had no way to estimate how many people may have died in the 7.0 earthquake that hit Tuesday, shortly before 5 p.m.

He pointed to the partial collapse of the presidential palace -- a sturdy, statuesque building constructed in 1918 -- as a marker of how bad the devastation will be among the country's numerous shantytowns and simple homes.

"If a building like the palace, which is very solid, collapsed, then the devastation is going to be worse since the buildings are not up to code in Port-au-Prince," Joseph said. "They are flimsy little abodes."

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The Haitian president Rene Preval and his wife were in the palace at the time of the earthquake, but contacted the U.S. consulate in Florida late Tuesday night to confirm they were unijured.

Joseph said Haiti, especially it's capital, is dotted with small homes that cling to the country's hillsides and were not constructed to stand up to an earthquake of this magnitude. He told "GMA" that he remembered once flying over Port-au-Prince and musing that construction of the city's neighborhoods were a disaster waiting to happen.

"I'm sorry," he said today. "It has happened."

Hospitals are said to have been devastated and overwhelmed by the injured. One clinic director sent out an e-mail plea after the quake: "Port-au-Prince is devastated, lot of deaths. SOS. SOS."

Joseph said Haiti was most in need of a hospital ship stationed in Haitian waters, as well as supplies to help keep residents safe and warm.

Haiti's first lady Elisabeth Debrosse Delatour, he said, "asked for first-time responders and all types of good water, clothes, blankets, anything that would be needed for victims from the outset."

The U.S. promised aid immediately after the quake hit and President Obama has orgnaized a coordinated military reponse. The Navy carrier USNS Carl Vinson is on its way to Haiti and will pick up a helicopter squadron in Florida on the way.

The hospital ship the USNS Comfort has also been activated from Baltimore.