Haiti estimates 140,000 dead, violence breaks out

PORT-AU-PRINCE, (Reuters) – Haitian authorities said  today they believe 140,000 people were killed in the  earthquake that devastated the Caribbean nation and said gangs  of robbers were preying on survivors desperately awaiting aid.
“We are cleaning the streets of the dead bodies and putting  them in mass graves. We have buried 40,000 people. We think  there are 100,000 more on top of that,” Aramick Louis,  secretary of state for public safety, told Reuters. “There are  a lot of people under the rubble.”
He said the main concern of the president and prime  minister, who were coordinating the Haitian government’s  response from the judicial police headquarters near the  airport, was that desperation was turning to violence.
“We are sending our police into areas where bandits are  starting to operate. Some people are robbing, are stealing.  That is wrong,” Louis said.
“The people in the refugee places, once they do not find  food and assistance, they are getting angry and upset. Our  message to everyone is to stay calm.”
Some looting broke out in downtown Port-au-Prince, with a  body burned and at least two shots fired, a witness said.
Three days after the earthquake, governments across the  world were pouring relief supplies and medical teams into the  quake-hit Caribbean state — already the poorest in the Western  Hemisphere.
But huge logistical hurdles, including a clogged airport  and badly damaged port, and the sheer scale of the destruction  meant aid was not yet reaching hundreds of thousands of  victims.