
(CBS)
A desperate citizenry combined with an absence of police forces has led to increased looting in Port-au-Prince in the wake of a massive earthquake that is estimated to have killed tens of thousands.
Video footage from the city showed bands of Haitian youths armed with machetes wandering the streets looting, as the local police were largely invisible.
(Ed. note: CBS News correspondent Kelly Cobiella will report on looting in Port-au-Prince on the CBS Evening News, tonight at 6:30 p.m. EST.)
"The Hatian National Police are not visible at all," said David Wimhurst, a spokesman for the United Nations peacekeeping mission in Port-au-Prince. The U.N. peacekeepers are themselves devastated by casualties from the quake.
Whether the machete-wielding men posed a violent threat to the rest of the city is unclear, but what is clear is that quake survivors are taking more drastic measures as relief efforts have become bogged down in what some aid workers call a
"logistical nightmare."How to Help VictimsBlog: The Latest DevelopmentsComplete Coverage: Devastation in HaitiMatt Marek, of the American Red Cross, said the widespread looting has mainly been relegated to collapsed buildings, not undamaged stores.
"There is no other way to get provisions," he told The Associated Press. "Even if you have money, those resources are going to be exhausted in a few days."
But some think the looting is becoming a more serious threat.
"It is dangerous at night. Lootings were widespread and some markets were ransacked," Oxfam spokesman Cedric Perus said in a statement to the AP. .
And the problem will likely get worse in the absence of more effective relief.
"Literally I can say the
whole population is homeless. … People grow more desperate and then God only know what's going to happen," Frederick Auzate, a Haitian-American from Silver Springs, Md., told
CBS Evening News anchor Katie Couric in Port-au-Prince Thursday.
U.S. State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said there have been reports of minor looting. Crowley said the U.S. military is headed to Haiti to "stabilize" the country – a priority set forth by Haiti's own government. Up to 3,500 soldiers are en route to the quake-ravaged nation from the U.S. Army's 82nd Airborne Division to assist with disaster relief and security, with the first 100 troops set to arrive Thursday, an Army official said.
Looting and violence are not uncommon in the wake of severe natural disasters that leave local communities isolated and desperate. After Hurricane Katrina battered New Orleans, television cameras captured widespread looting and there were reports of rooftop snipers firing upon rescue and news helicopters.
In this CBS News video, men carrying machetes are seen walking the streets of Port-au-Prince
Watch CBS News Videos Online
Perhaps the only solution is to aim an ICBM on the island and erase it.
And our main looter, Obama will send in our money to this thug and his thugees .... with NO conditions ... because his main objective is to come off as a savior (without actually helping any of the Haitien people)and in the process, save his own political ass. Obama's true objective is to make the USA into another Haiti w/himself as dictator for life in the Presidential Palace on Pennsylvania Avenue.
The real concern is Obama/Reid/Pelois's looting of the United States Treasury.
In 1929 Republican Hoover did nothing when the banks collapsed and the great depression was the result.
You should be thankful we have a President that can actually learn form history for a change.
<a href="http://ketiva.com/Arts_and_Humanities/why_i_want_to_be_a_tsunami.html">http://ketiva.com/Arts_and_Humanities/why_i_want_to_be_a_tsunami.html</a>
Maybe the world really is coming to an end!
Conservative Haitians will protect the Flatscreen and their property rights.
Liberal Haitians will care more for thier fellow man and start digging and helping out total strangers.
Just have to add politics into a disaster. I doubt there are liberals and conservatives in Haiti.