Amid Death, Destruction, Indians Help Tirelessly in Haiti


By Devirupa Mitra

New Delhi, Jan 18 (IANS) Escorting relief teams, giving medical treatment and providing logistics support to the UN - India's Lt. Col. Pronob K. Roy and over 150 fellow Indians of the UN mission in Haiti have been working tirelessly and without sleep since a devastating earthquake hit the country a week ago.

It was on Jan 12, at 4.53 p.m., that the earth shook violently with a magnitude of 7.0 in the Caribbean nation, flattening whole swathes of the country, with conservative estimates saying that over 50,000 people have perished.

The Indian contingent deployed with UN's Haiti mission, called MINUSTAH, consists of a 140-member Formed Police Unit (FPU), mainly from the Central Industrial Security Force (CISF), as well as 11 UN police officers. There are also 51 Indians working with Trigyn Technologies Ltd, a Mumbai-based company that provides IT support for UN missions.

India has sent $1 million in cash for emergency relief, and topped it with another $5 million. But what Col. Roy and other Indians are doing for the quake victims is an untold story.

For Roy, who landed in Haiti 24 days ago on deputation from the Indian Army to the UN logistics unit, his own survival is a miracle - three times over.

"I was supposed to be in the UN headquarters but due to my presence in another conference I was lucky the first time," 38-year-old Roy told IANS over telephone from Port-au-Prince.

The logistics base was located at the foot of a hill on which the MINUSTAH headquarters, operating from a hotel, collapsed, killing its chief, Hedi Annabi, a Tunisian, and over 100 UN personnel.

The next miracle was when Roy survived the quake in his office at the logistics base, the computer, air-conditioner and almirahs falling around him. Cracks bloomed on his office walls.

Unshaken, Roy returned after the tremor into the damaged office to see if he could salvage anything.

"Bang came the first aftershock in 15 minutes. This time the windows cracked on my back. Still I managed to survive," he recalled.

While the FPU members are safe, the building developed several cracks. "All the personnel are now sleeping in the open and not using the concrete structure for their stay."

With collapsed buildings, strewn bodies and roads clogged, the Indians working with the UN rallied immediately to start giving relief work after the killer quake.

"I got the first communication from a local who came rushing saying that the headquarter building had crumbled. The whole city was in a jam. Petrol pumps were burning. There was utter chaos," said Roy, whose family is from Kolkata.

With all the UN senior officials untraceable at the collapsed MINUSTAH headquarters, Roy, deputy chief of the integrated support services, Minustah's Logistic Base Crisis Centre, was given powers to take charge till his next superior was found alive.

"Within 45 minutes, I went on my aerial sortie to see the situation," Roy said.

Indian personnel were also crucial in getting power and water supply restored to the premises of Minustah within hours.

"The water pipes had burst and the plumbing had clogged. Bhupinder Singh, a water treatment plant specialist, reported to me at 3 a.m., walking on foot from his collapsed house," he said.

Singh used his ingenuity to connect the water lines and operate the pump station by 6 in the morning.

Indians used to working with lesser materials have been inventive in managing with the broken-down infrastructure, dealing with unimaginable destruction and death on a regular manner.

"When you see a corpse you don't panic, you call another guy and lift it and put the body in an orderly manner. When you do not have refrigeration container to put it in, you empty a container which has food and keep the body in it and use the food to feed the people."

The Indian FPUs have been put in charge of escorting the rescue and relief teams that are rushing to Haiti from around the world.

But the Indians have been going beyond their call of duty.

With all hospitals collapsed, urgent medical attention has been given by the FPU, who set up a medical camp within the premises. There are also another 35 Indian nuns working with the Missionaries of Charity, who are also engaged in humanitarian work.

"We have been working for six days without sleep. I don't know how I have been going on. I really, really want to put on record how amazing our boys have been," Roy said.

  

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Comment on this article

  • Barbara Bayer, Muscat, Oman

    Wed, Jan 20 2010

    JAI HO BHARAT!!! This is INDIANs in ACTION. "When you see a corpse you don't panic, you call another guy and lift it and put the body in an orderly manner. When you do not have refrigeration container to put it in, you empty a container which has food and keep the body in it and use the food to feed the people." Beautiful statement!!! We as INDIANS are indeed extremely proud of our fellow INDIANs in ACTION at HAITI. Well done Lt.Col. Pronob Roy and your team, not forgetting the Missionaries of Charity. We pray God gives strength and sustain all of you who are tirelessly serving unselfishly. Thanks DAIJIWORLD was enlightening us readers with such remarkable news, wherein we would never have been able to know the selfless dedicated services rendered by of our Proud Workers at Haiti

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  • Kiran, Mangalore

    Tue, Jan 19 2010

    I think Mr. Nagesh should refrain from making such irrelavent comments. We need to be proud of the Indian Contingent that is working tirelessly against all odds to bring relief to the Haitians devastated by a killer quake. I salute all the brave Indian men and women working in Haiti at this point in time

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  • Joseph F. Gonsalves, Bannur,Puttur/Mangalore

    Tue, Jan 19 2010

    Dear Mr. Nagesh Nayak, By reminding as such to the daijiworld readers, you also fall to such a category. The Minister has resigned from the post which he held. You are a volunteer of bjp and will you also renounce bjp and join congress? With one hand no one can clap since you have used another hand and now the readers of daijiworld can applause to your third grade comment.

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  • janet, Dubai/Mangalore

    Mon, Jan 18 2010

    God bless you Lt. Col. Roy and your team and all the people who is working for helping the Haiti people. keep up the good job.

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  • nagesh nayak, bangalore

    Mon, Jan 18 2010

    HI DAIJI READERS, PLEASE ASK REASON FOR EARTHQUAKE IN HAITI WITH MR. T.JOHN. HE IS THE BEST ASTROLGER . DURING GUJARATH EARTHQUAKE HE WAS THE ONE WHO GAVE REASON. JAI HO PSUEDOS.

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  • Ida Rodrigues, M'lore/mumbai

    Mon, Jan 18 2010

    What a Tragedy! My heart goes to all who have suffered losses. May God guide n bless our people to work tirelessly n selflessly! GOD BLESS U N YOUR TEAM Lt.Col.Roy..

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  • Irene, Mangalore/Peru

    Mon, Jan 18 2010

    Thank you Lt.Col.Pronob Roy and all who work with you in this hard mission to help the needy. May God give you good health and generous hands to help the suffering people of Haiti

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  • Antony Crasta, Mangalore/Sydney, Australia

    Mon, Jan 18 2010

    Amazing story, sad though! Well done Lt.Col. Pronob Roy and your team of Formed Police Unit from CISF. Your own story of survival is a miracle indeed!

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