Haiti hit by 7.0-magnitude earthquake;  buildings leveled in Port-au-Prince
 Major earthquake hits Haiti. Haiti was rocked  on Jan. 12 by the largest earthquake ever recorded in the area. The earthquake  had a preliminary magnitude of 7.0 and was centered about 10 miles west of  Port-au-Prince. The most powerful earthquake ever recorded in Haiti devastated  parts of the impoverished island nation Tuesday, leveling a hospital in the  capital, severely damaging the U.N. headquarters and other buildings, and  sending panicked residents into the streets.
  Haiti hit by 7.0-magnitude earthquake;  buildings leveled in Port-au-Prince
  Beleaguered authorities braced for major  casualties, but with communications  crippled across the country, there were no  firm estimates. Photos from the area showed smashed cars and people pulling  victims from the rubble. The roof of the presidential palace was in  pieces.
  The quake, which had a preliminary magnitude of  7.0, occurred about 4:53 p.m. and was centered about 10 miles west of the  capital, Port-au-Prince. Witnesses reported a series of strong  aftershocks.
  The United Nations said that its headquarters  in Port-au-Prince, a city of 2 million people, had suffered "serious damage" and  that "a large number of personnel remain unaccounted for."
  "People are out in the streets, crying,  screaming, shouting," said Karel Zelenka, director of the Catholic Relief  Services office in Haiti. "They see the extent of the damage," he said, but  could do little to rescue people trapped under rubble because night had  fallen.
  "There are a lot of collapsed buildings,"  Zelenka said in a telephone interview from Port-au-Prince. "This will be a  major, major disaster."
  He reported that poorly constructed shantytowns  and other buildings had crumbled in huge clouds of dust. Near the CRS  headquarters, a supermarket was "completely razed," he said, and a gasoline  station and a church were reduced to rubble. Among the worst-hit areas was the  impoverished Carrefour section of Port-au-Prince near the sea.
  In the wealthier Petionville part of the city,  where diplomats and well-off Haitians live in hillside homes , a hospital was wrecked and  houses had tumbled into a ravine, according to the Associated Press.
  President Obama issued a statement saying his  "thoughts and prayers go out to those who have been affected by this  earthquake."
  The State Department said the United States  will provide military and civilian disaster assistance to Haiti. The U.S. Agency  for International Development said in a statement that it would send up to 72  workers, six search-and-rescue dogs, and up to 48 tons of rescue equipment. The  Coast Guard said Tuesday night that it was preparing to deploy cutters and  aircraft to deliver aid as needed.
  State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said  embassy officials had begun trying to contact Americans living in the city but  were hampered by a lack of communication and by roads that were  impassable.
 "The damage is significant. Lots of walls down.  There are people who have been killed by falling debris," Crowley said.  "Clearly, the situation there, the damage there, is significant."





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