50 dead in Haitian grade-school collapse
Sunday, 9 November 2008
PETION-VILLE, (Haiti), Nov 8 (AFP): About 50 schoolchildren and teachers were killed when a shantytown grade school packed with hundreds of students collapsed during classes Friday, a government official said.
The three-story La Promesse (The Promise) school in Petion-ville, on the outskirts of Port-au-Prince, caved in in a heap of cement slabs and twisted steel rods at about 10:00 am (1500 GMT) Friday, trapping scores inside.
By late in the day at around 50 bodies, most of them children, had been found, officials said.
"We have counted about 50 dead for the moment, and around 85 injured," said Nadia Lochard of the civil protection bureau.
"But there are still numerous children stuck in the rubble. We have signs that they are still alive and we are organizing help to try to save them," she said.
Lochard said that French fire crews from Guadaloupe were to arrive overnight Friday to help in the rescue.
Earlier an AFP count put the toll at 40, including 30 bodies sent to the Haiti State University Hospital in Port-au-Prince, six sent to a Petion-ville hospital, and four others seen on stretchers.
As many as 700 students aged from three to 20 attend the church- run school in a suburb of the capital, but an accurate count of how many had been inside when it crumbled was not available.
A new story had been under construction atop the three-story school when it fell in, also destroying or damaging five homes next to it.
Worried parents rushed to the site after the news in search of their children after the building caved in, and scores of people climbed over the pile of crumbled concrete-and-steel bar to rescue those pinned underneath, their faces covered in the grey dust of the cement.
Cries of distress could be heard around the site, from still-alive students and teachers beneath the rubble and from parents desperately searching for their children.
The bodies of the first victims, some with their limbs crushed, were laid inside a building next to the school and covered with sheets.
A deeply distressed Marie Flore said she had no news of any of her three children.
The International Red Cross, the Haitian Red Cross, members of the UN Haiti peacekeeping force and other groups joined in the rescue.
Haitian President Rene Preval and Prime Minister Michele Pierre- Louis hurried to the scene to oversee rescue efforts, as other officials swore an investigation into the construction and a survey of other schools possibly at risk.
The three-story La Promesse (The Promise) school in Petion-ville, on the outskirts of Port-au-Prince, caved in in a heap of cement slabs and twisted steel rods at about 10:00 am (1500 GMT) Friday, trapping scores inside.
By late in the day at around 50 bodies, most of them children, had been found, officials said.
"We have counted about 50 dead for the moment, and around 85 injured," said Nadia Lochard of the civil protection bureau.
"But there are still numerous children stuck in the rubble. We have signs that they are still alive and we are organizing help to try to save them," she said.
Lochard said that French fire crews from Guadaloupe were to arrive overnight Friday to help in the rescue.
Earlier an AFP count put the toll at 40, including 30 bodies sent to the Haiti State University Hospital in Port-au-Prince, six sent to a Petion-ville hospital, and four others seen on stretchers.
As many as 700 students aged from three to 20 attend the church- run school in a suburb of the capital, but an accurate count of how many had been inside when it crumbled was not available.
A new story had been under construction atop the three-story school when it fell in, also destroying or damaging five homes next to it.
Worried parents rushed to the site after the news in search of their children after the building caved in, and scores of people climbed over the pile of crumbled concrete-and-steel bar to rescue those pinned underneath, their faces covered in the grey dust of the cement.
Cries of distress could be heard around the site, from still-alive students and teachers beneath the rubble and from parents desperately searching for their children.
The bodies of the first victims, some with their limbs crushed, were laid inside a building next to the school and covered with sheets.
A deeply distressed Marie Flore said she had no news of any of her three children.
The International Red Cross, the Haitian Red Cross, members of the UN Haiti peacekeeping force and other groups joined in the rescue.
Haitian President Rene Preval and Prime Minister Michele Pierre- Louis hurried to the scene to oversee rescue efforts, as other officials swore an investigation into the construction and a survey of other schools possibly at risk.