January 18, 2010 6:58 PM

Elderly Haitians Waiting to Die

By
CBSNews
(CBS)  The old lady crawls in the dirt, wailing for her pills. The elderly man lies motionless as rats pick at his overflowing diaper.

There is no food, water or medicine for the 85 surviving residents of the Port-au-Prince Municipal Nursing Home, barely a mile from the airport where a massive international aid effort is taking shape.

"Help us, help us," 69-year-old Mari-Ange Levee begged Sunday, lying on the ground with a broken leg and ribs. A cluster of flies swarmed the open fracture in her skull.

Complete Coverage: Devastation in Haiti
Haiti Quake: How You can Help

One man has already died, and administrator Jean Emmanuel said more would follow soon unless water and food arrive immediately.

"I appeal to anybody to bring us anything, or others won't live until tonight," he said, motioning toward five men and women who were having trouble breathing, a sign that the end was near.

The dead man was Joseph Julien, a 70-year-old diabetic who was pulled from the partially collapsed building and passed away Thursday for lack of food.

His rotting body lies on a mattress, nearly indistinguishable from the living around him, so skinny and tired they seemed to be simply waiting for death.

With six residents killed in the quake, the institution now has 25 men and 60 women camped outside their former home. Some have a mattress in the dirt to lie on. Others don't.

Madeleine Dautriche, 75, said some of the residents had pooled their money to buy three packets of pasta, which the dozens of pensioners shared on Thursday, their last meal. Since there was no drinking water, some didn't touch the noodles because they were cooked in gutter water.

Dautriche noted that many residents wore diapers that hadn't been changed since the quake.

"The problem is, rats are coming to it," she said.

Though very little food aid had reached Haitians anywhere by Sunday, Emmanuel said the problem was made worse at the nursing home because it is located near Place de la Paix, an impoverished downtown neighbourhood.

Thousands of homeless slum dwellers have pitched their makeshift tents on the nursing home's ground, in effect shielding the elderly patients from the outside world with a tense maze of angry people, themselves hungry and thirsty.

"I'm pleading for everyone to understand that there's a truce right now, the streets are free, so you can come through to help us," said Emmanuel, 27, one of the rare officials not to have fled the squalor and mayhem. He insisted that foreign aid workers wouldn't be in danger if they tried to cross through the crowd to reach the elderly group.

Violent scuffles erupted Saturday in the adjacent soccer stadium when U.S. helicopters dropped boxes of military rations and Gatorade. But none of this trickle of help had reached the nursing home residents, who said some refugees have robbed them of what little they had.

Dautriche, who was sitting on the ground because of her broken back, held out an empty blue plastic basin. "My underwear and my money were in there," she said, sobbing. "Children stole it right in front of me and I couldn't move."

The area was an eery corner of silence within the clamour of crying babies and toddlers running naked in the mud. Guarding the little space was Phileas Julien, 78, a blind man in a wheelchair who shouted at anybody approaching to turn back.

During moments of lucidity, Julien said he was better off than other pensioners because the medicine he was taking provided sustenance. A moment later, he threw his arms out to hug a passer-by he mistook for his grandson.



Also trying to guard the centre was Jacqueline Thermiti, 71, who couldn't stand because of pain but who brandished her walking stick when children approached.

"Of all the wars and revolutions and hurricanes, this quake is the worst thing God has ever sent us," Thermiti said.

Initially, Thermiti and others believed their relatives would come to feed them, because many live in the slums nearby. "But I don't even know if my children are alive," she said.

Thermiti was surprisingly feisty for someone who hadn't eaten since Tuesday. She attributed that to experience with hunger during earlier hardships.

"But I was younger, and now there's no water either," she said.

She predicted that unlike other pensioners, she could still hold out for at least another day.

"Then if the foreigners don't come (with aid)," she said, "it will be up to baby Jesus."

Copyright 2010 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment See all 19 Comments
by compassionplease January 21, 2010 2:43 AM EST
can someone follow up on this story and let us know how the eldery people of haiti are doing? i would really like to know if our government or if any aid relief workers are assisting these people. they need help immediately. it's not just the orphans, and young people that need help, but the elderly too! i think this news story needs to be revisited and reemphasized so that the higher-ups really understand what's going on here, and how ordinary citizens are not being taken care of.
Reply to this comment
by palaciosn January 18, 2010 12:45 PM EST
If don't know how to help these people directly. I wish someone would tell us how to help.

I did however donate to the AARP who have established a find to help teh elderly and are matching contributions. Please Help!
Reply to this comment
by fabrat1 January 18, 2010 10:50 AM EST
If the media can reach them then why can't the aid workers???
Reply to this comment
by traffic101 January 18, 2010 8:07 AM EST
The world needs to help them now! Putting 5 cents in a jar at walmart doesn't even get there. The gov needs to step in and help now.

NOTE:
This world is too populated. Eventually, whether we like it or not we must have poplulation control that way everyone that is alive can live good. I know it is against the bible and free will, but it must be done. Also, people with desease and ailments or no money to care for their young should not be allowed to breed. Do you let your ill animals breed? Think about it!

Once again, the government needs to help these people immediatly! There is nothing as an individual i can do personally.
Reply to this comment
by erasmus111 January 17, 2010 10:17 PM EST
Very sad.
Reply to this comment
by chrobrego-2009 January 17, 2010 10:06 PM EST
Will someone from the government please help these people right away.

Everyone, please go to your congressman's website and the white house website and send a message.

This is awful.

Shame it happens on the streets of our own cities every day as well though...
Reply to this comment
by barbaram99 January 17, 2010 7:00 PM EST
Anothng thing need to be done is round up the prisoners..The gent from OK made sense..I feel for the people there..As sorrowful as it is..I am a handicapped person from birth..Schools are also needed to educate them..It is so pitiful..They need the basics..
Reply to this comment
by nowhiningallowed January 17, 2010 6:44 PM EST
May God bless the dead, the dying, the injured and maimed. May God especially bless all of the rescuers from all the nations trying desperately to help these wretched souls.
Reply to this comment
by erb0087 January 17, 2010 6:35 PM EST
"Residents of Nursing Home Dying of Thirst, Hunger"

If they can reach these people with cameras to take their pictures, they should be able to reach them with water, food and clean clothes.

Do it !!
Reply to this comment
by FauxNews January 17, 2010 9:24 PM EST
You're right. They could feed them for months for the price of one of those cameras they are usings to film them.
by liselle3 January 17, 2010 6:01 PM EST
Oh please merciful God and humanitarians... help these people. No human deserves this indignity and suffering.
Reply to this comment
by nowhiningallowed January 17, 2010 6:39 PM EST
Natural disasters aren't something like the Internet, where there is an immediacy of things. Given the horrendous overpopulation and the shoddy construction of buildings and the lack of infrastructure and inept government and civil services, this devastating earthquake has complicated things to no end. God and the humanitarians are doing everything possible to save as many injured as possible, while attempting to rescue as many as possible. God and the humanitarians and rescuers aren't hanging around doing nothing. Yes, no human deserves any indignity or suffering, unfortunately, in a natural disaster like this, they will; they are casualties of nature. That's part of life.
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