Obama fails to contact Haitian president after massive quake

 
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U.S. President Barack Obama on Wednesday made unsuccessful efforts to contact Haitian President Rene Preval, whose presidential palace was badly damaged during the massive earthquake Tuesday.

U.S. President Barack Obama makes remarks about the devastation caused by an earthquake in Haiti as Vice President Joe Biden listens at the White House in Washington January 13, 2010. Obama said he had ordered the U.S. government to provide fast, coordinated help to save lives, saying military overflights had already begun assessing damage, emergency supplies were being sent and search and rescue teams would be arriving on Wednesday and Thursday.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo)

U.S. President Barack Obama makes remarks about the devastation caused by an earthquake in Haiti as Vice President Joe Biden listens at the White House in Washington January 13, 2010. Obama said he had ordered the U.S. government to provide fast, coordinated help to save lives, saying military overflights had already begun assessing damage, emergency supplies were being sent and search and rescue teams would be arriving on Wednesday and Thursday.[Xinhua] 

 During the course of the day, Obama called UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon and regional leaders about the on-going efforts to assist Haiti in the wake of Tuesday's massive earthquake, the White House said. However, he failed to get Preval on the phone.

Kenneth Merten, U.S. ambassador to Haiti, relayed to Obama a conversation he had with Preval earlier in the day, in which Merten conveyed condolences and support of the United States.

Preval's presidential palace suffered extensive damage in the earthquake. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told a press availability in Hawaii that Preval "is alive but has nowhere to live."

Apart from Ban, Obama called his Brazilian counterpart Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Canadian Prime Minster Stephen Harper, Mexican President Felipe Calderon, and Chilean President Michelle Bachelet.

Obama expressed his deepest sympathies to Ban and Lula for the losses suffered by the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH).

A view shows the badly damaged presidential palace after an earthquake in Port-au-Prince January 13, 2010. A major earthquake rocked Haiti, killing possibly thousands of people as it toppled the presidential palace and hillside shanties alike and left the Caribbean nation appealing for international help.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo)

A view shows the badly damaged presidential palace after an earthquake in Port-au-Prince January 13, 2010. A major earthquake rocked Haiti, killing possibly thousands of people as it toppled the presidential palace and hillside shanties alike and left the Caribbean nation appealing for international help.[Xinhua]  

 

At least 16 MINUSTAH personnel were killed in the earthquake, 11 of whom were Brazilians.

In his conversations with Ban and regional leaders, Obama reiterated the U.S. commitment to support the rescue and recovery effort in Haiti.

Lula, Calderon, Bachelet and Harper described the contributions their governments are making to the search and rescue mission and to long-term international efforts to support Haiti's recovery.

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