======================================================================
Rule #1: YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when replying to a message.
======================================================================


MSF logo

January 18, 2010 Teleconference on Haiti Earthquake on January 18, 2010

© Joshua Lutz/Redux

Benoit Leduc, MSF operations manager for Haiti

Benoit Leduc, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) 
operations manager for Haiti, and Loris de Filippi, MSF operational 
coordinator in Port-au-Prince, participated in a teleconference with 
press regarding MSF's response to the January 12, 2010, earthquake. Listen:

Download

Avril Benoit: Welcome to the Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans 
Frontières (MSF) media briefing. I’m Avril, director of communications 
based in Toronto. My name is A-V-R-I-L. Last name is B-E-N-O-I-T.

The purpose of the briefing is to give you the latest update from two of 
our most senior operations people in Port-Au-Prince. Benoit Leduc is 
emergency coordinator. His first name Benoit is spelled B-E-N-O-I-T and 
his family name, Leduc, is L-E-D-U-C. He can answer questions on our 
humanitarian response, security, issues around the cargo planes, and all 
the incendiary issues that are making our work very difficult…quite a 
challenge. Also with us to provide an additional medical overview is 
Loris De Filippi. Loris is spelled L-O-R-I-S, and De Filippi is D-E 
F-I-L-I-P-P-I. Loris has a medical background and is in Haiti as a 
coordinator for MSF, in Choscal in City Soleil, amongst other duties. 
So, for the first 30 minutes of this briefing we will talk in English, 
and then we will switch to French

(2:01) Benoit Leduc: Hello everybody, so just to describe what we’re 
seeing today. Basically we’re seeing the patients that arrived to our 
structures, the existing structures in Port-au-Prince, and some of these 
structures have been damaged. So, patients were inside and people 
continue who, I mean, are wounded, trauma fractures, people coming to 
our structures. So we have been forced to reorganize, either move the 
structure when the (earthquake) hit, or make makeshift hospital and 
surgical capacity, and we operate also in places that we’ve invested 
with our teams and our materials. So now we have all these patients, a 
lot of amputations, a lot of trauma, head injuries, and these people are 
waiting for operations. Pretty quickly…Now it’s day 6 so we are just 
trying to build up our surgical capacity and treat all those people who 
need treatment pretty soon.
(3:00) And of course we are behind pace, it’s really a risk. So that’s 
the first thing, the structures. Now, we have five structures in which 
three of them it’s possible to do surgery. We are clearly seeing 
altogether over a thousand patients. Registration was a bit chaotic but 
we’re pretty sure that this amount were able to reach us. And perform 
300 surgical operations At the same time we’re trying to see what’s 
happening in the western areas like Jacmel, Saint Marc, Petit Goave, 
Léogâne—places which have been very badly hit. The epicenter was on that 
side, in the southwest part of Haiti. So we have teams doing exploratory 
missions.

Access is pretty difficult; they had to hire a helicopter to go there. 
Basically, a lot of destruction in the town and no health capacity, no 
treatment operational, and it’s again the same—they need surgery and the 
trauma, it is a very urgent thing. Then of course in town, a lot of 
internally displaced persons (IDP) camps, difficult to count, difficult 
to get accurate figures. Most probably, when we talk of over 200,000 
people sleeping in the streets, in any open space, any empty space they 
can find. You have groups of like several hundred families, thousands of 
people, sleeping there on the plastic sheeting. What else do we see? 
There’s little operations going on. I know there are a lot of plans, a 
lot of teams on their way, but concretely there’s been only ad hoc food 
distribution, water distribution, or any action in assistance to the 
displaced people in town. Things are building up.
(5:00) It’s difficult operations; we are facing logistic constraints. We 
had five of our planes: three cargo planes and two for expatriate staff. 
I’m talking of surgical teams that we tried to send in pretty quickly. 
Five of these planes were refused to land, had to go to Santo Domingo 
across the border. So these are additional delays. We clearly have like 
48 hours additional delays because of these access problems to the site.

For our cargo, we’re bringing inflatable hospitals, with a 100-bed 
capacity, with 2 operating theaters, we have all the teams coming, and 
the drugs. Right now some of our structures are out of supplies. We have 
the team, we have the operational theaters functional, ready for staff, 
but we’re lacking some essential drugs. So this is something we’re 
trying to work on. We’re doing this stuff as fast as possible. Because 
basically they will go directly to the operating theater, these drugs to 
treat the people. So this is a bit of an overview….

(6:15) Loris De Filippi: From a medical point of view, the situation is 
absolutely dramatic because we are running against time and already in 
our facility, for instance in Cite Soleil, we have something like 200 
people that are waiting for an intervention, major or minor. The number 
of gangrene pathologies needs are increasing… (connection breaks up)

Just to give a surgical response as quick as we can: We are working, all 
our facilities in in an operation theater, we are trying to do as much 
as we can there. On the other end, other pathologies include pregnancies 
… so the big two maternities (facilities) in Port-au-Prince are closed 
so a lot of people are arriving in a very difficult state. Women, they 
have to deliver with … caesarean section.
(7:20) Of course something that isn’t … (breaks up) … is the violence. 
Yesterday we received people with gunshot and other wounds. So apart 
from all the problems related to the earthquake there are other 
additional things that create a lot of problems. Pathologies that can be 
very important are tetanus. It is very important you know. There is a 
very, very low coverage—the lowest coverage in the Western 
Hemisphere—for Haiti. Like, six months ago there was a diptheria 
outbreak. So, it is very important to vaccinate as much as we can, at 
least people that are wounded in the hospitals. That’s why yesterday we 
tried, at least in our facilities, to vaccinate all the people... (8:28?)

Avril: Okay, thank you Loris De Filippi and Benoit Leduc. I received 
some statistics, some numbers just before the conference call began. And 
the latest overall figure is that, so far, MSF has treated well over 
3,000 people. In terms of numbers of surgery already performed, we're 
close to 500, with the latest figures.

(Opens floor to questions)

9:25 AP: Hi, I was wondering why the distribution of aid has been so 
slow, and what needs to happen for this to speed up.

Benoit: I think we are facing logistic constraints; you know, lack of 
cars, some of the houses have been destroyed, the staff is traumatized. 
And I think there is this supply to bring the stuff to Port-au-Prince. 
Actually on the side, this is a clear constraint and delay. And then the 
general organization in this chaos, communications have been very bad. I 
don’t want to give the excuse to aid organizations, but it’s a difficult 
operation, we want to go as fast as possible. People are under the 
collapsed houses, it’s important for all the rescue teams to get in. 
People are sleeping in the streets. Everyone is trying to help and 
getting organized, and things are picking up, I would say.


10:30 The Times: This is obviously a huge operation. Do you have a sense 
that it is being well coordinated? Is it clear to you who is in charge 
at the top?

Benoit: Well yes, for sure it’s a difficult operation. Just for us, we 
have now 165 staff, like a dozen surgical teams, so we have to 
coordinate them. And we are working in our structures. I think your 
question is pertinent. This coordination issue so far is not existing, 
or not efficient at this stage. It’s an issue. I don’t really know who 
is in charge. We are doing our best to treat people who are just in 
front of our gates, and we are like “heads down” on the operating table 
so far. What’s happening with coordination, I don’t think we have a 
clear idea, because such a mechanism is not really in place right now.

Avril: Just to give you the precise figures as well, in terms of 
international staff inside Haiti right now, MSF has 165. As you may 
recall, we already had 30 working in the country from a whole contingent 
of 800 that were already present managing projects before, when the 
earthquake struck that is. In terms of international staff that are on 
their way to Haiti, at the moment there are 48 en route, and for Haitian 
staff, we have at the moment working 550.

12:15 WSJ: A question about the aid not getting in, the 5 planes that 
were diverted. How did the cluster system work in this case – did that 
work smoothly – that was put into place after the tsunami to get the aid 
on the planes, and the problem being at the airport that the United 
States military has put a priority in order over getting aid in? Is that 
the reason planes were diverted? And did the cluster system work well in 
this case?

Benoit: Well, obviously as the plane did not land and inside was some 
really vital equipment, like surgical equipment and a hospital, and also 
some surgical teams. The cluster system did not work with these planes, 
and we are 48 hours delayed in this operation. On our side we have been 
trying through all our contacts, which is at the UN, or people in the 
United States, or here in Haiti--everywhere--we have tried all the 
possible channels for these planes to land. We have been given 
assurances that they could land, and they ended up (circling) over 
Port-au-Prince, and eventually diverted to Santo Domingo.

WSJ: So was the blame the US military not giving you the clearance to 
land, they control the aiport, or was it the cluster system that the UN 
put in place?

Benoit: Between the 2 systems I don’t think there is a smooth liaison in 
who decides what. It’s not clear to us, as I said before. Then yesterday 
we clearly had 2 planes diverted with cargo inside. People had been 
informed, I think the US were on the ground at the airport. The 
airspace, maybe I think it’s the Haitians but please confirm, because I 
think it’s changing all the time who is controlling. The planes didn’t 
land, and this was yesterday afternoon.

Avril: We have had 4 cargo flights that successfully have flown to 
Port-au-Prince, with a total tonnage of 135. We have 2 cargo flights 
that flew to Dominican Republic with their total tonnage being 65. At 
the moment we have 6 cargo flights planned for the rest of this week, 
with a total tonnage of 195.
14:50

15:21 TV NOVA: I would like to know more about the security issue and 
about the security situation on the ground. Could you describe it, is it 
dangerous, for example, more during night, what happened in this field 
please.

Benoit: I know there have been very localized incidents. People are very 
tense, and people are shocked. So it’s more reasons for them to get 
frustrated when they see that the aid and the food for example, or the 
care is not fully implemented, only at the very ad hoc and very 
[indecipherable] distribution stage. So there have been several 
problems, people running, and I think Loris can give the details of what 
happened maybe this morning at the airport. But we know that some of the 
distribution has ended up in, I don’t want to exaggerate my words, but 
maybe very small riots. People are shocked, people are tense, people are 
desperate, they’re in the street now for 6 days, so this adds to the 
tension. And there are sporadic reports of either shootouts or 
incidents, security incidents, more things happening throughout the town.

TV NOVA : Did I also hear well that you have also treated people with 
gunshots? Benoit:This I would like Loris to confirm because he has been 
to this hospital……..

Loris: There is an increasing of wounds in the hospital, two facilities 
in the...:: breaks up from 17:10-17:19:: Yesterday, we took care of 
about 6 people in the Choscal Hospital and some of them in the 
Martissant Facilitiy. Today we were witness of a very difficult 
situation at the airport. Probably there were distribution of fuel, and 
this time a lot of people are really struggling to get a little bit of 
fuel to move, and of course, this can really increase the tension. Some 
people shot in the air, at the airport, and brought this sort of 
incredible movement of people that was carrying even our staff…that was 
(18:07?)…to the airport.

18:25 ALERTNET: A question about the fuel that you were saying, does MSF 
take in all its own fuel, and what is the fuel situation, because I’m 
hearing that’s one of the problems with getting the aid out from the 
airport to the people. And can I also ask about the situation of mass 
graves? What are you seeing on ground, are there lots of people being 
buried in mass graves, and is that a sensible thing to do at this stage?

19:00 Benoit: The fuel, it’s a real issue, our hospitals are running on 
generators day and night, so we need quite a lot of fuel. So far, we 
still have stock because we were present in Haiti before the quake. At 
the petrol stations there is a big lineup, and tensions in town. All, 
they are closed, so it’s going to be an issue if the supply doesn’t come 
in the coming days.

Loris: No... Apart of the fact from the fact that we are witnessing the 
situation, we have nothing to add on the situation. We know that it is a 
very big problem… but we have nothing to comment on. On the grave, what 
we can say is that when we arrived at the hospitals where we work, the 
number of death was pretty big. We tried to investigate and to give a 
name to all the bodies. More or less, we had 90 percent of the names, 
and we bring these people to a company that normally is (20:27)..in Cite 
Soleil…But we are not aware about mass graves so far.

Avril: I would also encourage journalists to consult a fact sheet from 
the International Committee of the Red Cross called “Why dead bodies do 
not cause epidemics.” We’ve been receiving a lot of questions about 
this, and our sense is that this fact sheet is actually very accurate 
and very much reflects what MSF has seen over the years with respect to 
this question of whether these dead bodies actually pose some risk of 
spreading disease.

21:12 GERMAN PRESS AGENCY: The American military has apparently taken 
over the airport and all of this. Is the aid operation becoming too 
militarized in your opinion? Secondly, what are sort of your longer term 
security concerns in Haiti?

Benoit: First, we just want the aid operation to be efficient. So far I 
think we can gain in efficiency; it's needed. Then, it’s a more general 
question about the militarization of humanitarian (aid). You know, the 
military distributing food, and at the same time having a gun, it’s 
extremely confusing. It’s a constraint for us in places like 
Afghanistan, in Iraq, in all the areas where military staff are doing 
humanitarian action or at least perform such actions under that name. So 
this is something that we are concerned with in MSF in general. To come 
back to your question, for Haiti, I think for whoever controls the 
airport to facilitate planes that have the emergency and needed 
equipment - this is the first problem right now.

22:49 MEDSCAPE: We have readers who are physicians and nurses, who want 
to volunteer. what is best way they can help you?

Avril: If you don't mind I'll just jump in with an answer to this, since 
we're trying to focus this briefing very much on the latest field 
information. For any experienced medical or non-medical staff, say the 
non-medical with logistical background in this kind of work, they would 
be encouraged to contact the human resources of their national 
MSF/Doctors Without Borders section. So, for example if you go to 
msf.org, which is our international website, you can connect to the 
section that takes in applicants for aid work with us.


23:46 NYT: I have a couple of questions on the airport and on security. 
I ran your complaints by [indecipherable], who’s the head of logistics 
for peacekeeping. She said it’s just too small of an airport to handle 
the number of flights that come flooding in from all over the world, and 
they had to come up with a list of priorities, so they said water, food, 
and then medical equipment. While she conceded that your hospital is 
important, she said 24 hours to get to Santo Domingo, given the size of 
the airport, is not a terrible delay. I would wonder how you would react 
to that. Second, I heard they are beefing up police force, they have 
more police this morning, because they want these humanitarian 
deliveries to be guarded. Are you seeing problems? Do you think that’s a 
good idea, that they bring in extra 3,500 troops mostly to guard 
humanitarian convoys?

Benoit: I will repeat, we have 48 hour’s delay, so we are frustrated, we 
have doctors who have patients in some of the structures without the 
proper drugs or the equipment to perform the operations they need, it’s 
a fact. We are 2 days behind on the operations because of this access. 
Of course, it’s a small airport, of course there are a lot of planes, 
but then it’s clearly a matter of defining priorities. We have the staff 
on the ground, we have the structures missing some staff. It’s 
frustrating. Then, I’m not the best person to answer about the 
deployment. Of course, we just want the operations to go on. So, for the 
moment we don’t see a lot of either police, either UN in the streets, 
only in certain strategic places or roundabouts, but the streets are 
pretty empty of police, this is what I can say.

26:00 Loris: Just to add something on that--it is quite amazing and 
frustrating the fact that 24 hours later we were operating with surgical 
teams, and now we are almost…I won’t say stopping the operation, but 
really going slow because we don’t have basic things to do operations 
and to assure the minimal of quality. This is absolutely difficult, and 
we hope we will find a solution very quickly. I hope to even be 
organization that we collaborate with directly just to assure that one 
or the other gets enough materials to assure this quality intervention.

27:19 DAILY TELEGRAPH: You say that vital medical operations are being 
delayed because these flights aren't able to be getting in. Could you 
give a figure on the number of avoidable deaths you think there may have 
been as a result of these delays?

Benoit: We are now in 3 places where we perform surgery, day and night, 
in 2 different operating theaters. So, all these places run at full 
speed, and you make the calculation if they can perform per OT 10 vital 
surgeries per day. Already we can say that hundreds of people might go 
away, we might lose them, either they will be amputated with the risk of 
septicemia after 6 days of infected wounds. So this is basic – and it’s 
hundreds. These are vital operations. When we talk about septicemia, it 
means we are going to lose some of those people in the coming days, 
after 10 days--2 weeks. We are afraid. And I come back to the previous 
question from one of your colleagues, that our halls in the hospitals 
might be full.

29:23 ORT IRISH NATIONAL RADIO In relation to the exploratory mission to 
the southwest, have you received any information back in relation to 
what it’s like there at the moment?

Benoit: Our team was able to go by helicopter to Jacmel, they’ve been to 
Saint Marc, Petit Goave, Grand Goave, in these places, and Léogâne also. 
They talk about very heavy destruction, a percentage like 80% of the 
town which is down. These areas are quite populated, I don’t have the 
exact figures in mind, but of course health structures have been 
affected, and they say there that the assistance for sure is not in 
place. Several other groups are trying to put hospitals, starting to 
intervene. But so far, clearly, big needs, no surgical capacity, no 
health access in general, and little in place in terms of assistance.

ORT IRISH NATIONAL RADIO HOW LONG WILL IT TAKE YOU TO ACCESS THESE AREAS?

Benoit: Well, our teams are there. We’ve got the staff, we’ve got some 
of the equipment, so now they’re just working on getting trucks and 
getting the stuff and people on the ground and getting staff. So these 
days, we’ll start the operations, we're just running against time. By 
the end of this week, clearly we want to increase the functional capacity.

© 2010 Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF)

________________________________________________
Send list submissions to: [email protected]
Set your options at: 
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/options/marxism/archive%40mail-archive.com

Reply via email to