Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play. Up to 10,000 US troops will be on the ground or off the coast of Haiti by Monday to help deal with the earthquake aid effort, US defence officials say. Tuesday's earthquake has left as many as 50,000-100,000 people dead. Haitian Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive said more than 15,000 bodies had already been recovered and buried, French news agency AFP reported. The UN has launched a flash appeal for $562m (£346m), saying three million people would need help for six months. Humanitarian chief John Holmes said a massive effort was being mounted and officials were "straining every nerve" to help. US President Barack Obama described the scale of the devastation as extraordinary and the losses suffered as "heartbreaking". AT THE SCENE Matt Frei, Port-au-Prince No-one is in charge. The president is sleeping at the airport with quite a few journalists and aid workers. Earlier this morning, I stood on top of the rubble of the Supreme Court, the Foreign Ministry, the Interior Ministry and the Senate - where a few senators had been killed when the quake hit. Their bodies have been dragged out and put in body bags. The representatives of state are literally lying on the pavement slowly rotting away. This is a citizenry left to its own extremely meagre resources. You've got ordinary people trying to administer IV drips to their family members who are slowly dying, but not a single doctor or nurse at the general hospital. In a statement at the White House, he said the US would "do what it takes to save lives and help people get back on their feet". Correspondents say survivors seem increasingly desperate and angry as bottlenecks and infrastructure damage delay relief efforts. Many are spending another day without food and shelter in the ruined capital. Mr Holmes earlier told reporters that 30% of buildings throughout Port-au-Prince had been damaged, with the figure at 50% in some areas. The Pan American Health Organization has estimated that the death toll could be as high as 100,000. The US has already sent an aircraft carrier, the USS Carl Vinson, to Haiti and the USS Bataan, carrying a marine expeditionary unit, is on its way. Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play. The chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm Mike Mullen, said a hospital ship and more helicopters would be sent in the coming days, carrying more troops and marines. He said the total number of US troops would rise to between 9,000 and 10,000. "Right now, I mean, literally as we speak, the Vinson (aircraft carrier) and the company from the 82nd Airborne who got there last night are focusing on delivering water from the helicopters offshore to the people of Haiti." They want us to provide them with help, which is, of course, what we want to do

David Wimhurst

UN spokesman

Haiti children at risk of disease How survivors are found Haiti desperate for help Survivors' stories LIVE: Haiti earthquake US defence secretary Robert Gates said the relief effort was the "highest priority for US military assets in this hemisphere", and all necessary resources would be made available. He described infrastructure problems which have led to delays in aid distribution as "facts of life". "I don't know how ... [the US] government could have responded faster or more comprehensively than it has," he said. The announcements came after Mr Obama pledged full American support in a phone call to his Haitian counterpart Rene Preval. The US president also said he would meet former Presidents George W Bush and Bill Clinton on Saturday to discuss Haiti. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will meanwhile travel to Haiti to see for herself the scale of the damage. Relief problems The UN said a total of about $310m (£190m) in international aid had been pledged so far for the relief effort. Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play. UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said that distribution of food and medicine was under way, but correspondents say there is little immediate sign of a co-ordinated relief effort on the ground. The UN's World Food Programme says two million people will need food aid, but it has so far managed to feed just a few thousand. Meanwhile, the head of the charity Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders) said thousands of people were waiting for surgery in Haiti's hospitals, AFP news agency reported. Port-au-Prince's small airport is filled to capacity and US air traffic controllers have taken charge to help manage the influx of planes. Mr Holmes said everyone was "working desperately" to resolve the problems and the capacity to deal with flights was rising. The port is too damaged to use and roads are blocked by debris, although the main route from the Dominican Republic is now clear.

Satellite and close-up images of Port-au-Prince devastation The BBC's Nick Davis in Port-au-Prince says the only convoys he has seen are people leaving the city, in search of food, water and medicine. "We hear on the radio that rescue teams are coming from the outside, but nothing is coming," said one man, Jean-Baptiste Lafontin Wilfried. David Wimhurst, a spokesman for the Brazilian-led UN peacekeeping mission in Haiti, said: "Unfortunately, they're slowly getting more angry and impatient." The UN headquarters has collapsed and correspondents say there is little official presence in Port-au-Prince despite incidents of looting. To see the enhanced content on this page, you need to have JavaScript turned on.



Click on the image to see the large version. About 45,000-50,000 people have died since Tuesday's 7.0 magnitude earthquake and 300,000 have been made homeless, the UN estimates. Aid groups say it is a race against time to find trapped survivors. Plane-loads of rescuers and relief supplies are arriving from the UK, China, the EU, Canada, Russia and Latin American nations. Gen Douglas Fraser, the commander of US Southcom, says around 90 aid flights a day are landing.



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