Quake-hit Haiti’s cabinet meets — in the open-air

PORT-AU-PRINCE, (Reuters) – Haiti’s cabinet met yesterday. On a bench and some plastic chairs in an open-air yard.

Grieving for their own losses and those of a nation, the  exhausted and overwhelmed officials sat in a circle on a  concrete slab outside a police station, seeking to put some  order into their response to a catastrophic earthquake.

Loosely-speaking, the United Nations is leading the relief  effort, while the U.S. military is in charge of air-traffic  after Tuesday’s disaster that Haitian officials say killed  between 100,000-200,000 people.

But in line with diplomatic propriety, Haitian leaders are  being consulted, and are giving approval, at every step.

Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive led yesterday’s cabinet  meeting. President Rene Preval raised a hand of greeting to the  team as he entered the police station that has become his home  and office since the presidential palace partially collapsed.

Foreign ambassadors and heads of U.N. and other  international agencies joined the ministers in what officials  said would now be a twice-daily meeting to try to coordinate  the world’s rush to help Haiti.