
"We're going to establish order, regardless of what it costs," he said.Meanwhile,Defense Minister Allan Wagner told The Associated Press in Pisco that the death toll from Wednesday's magnitude-8 quake had risen to 540, up from the previous figure of 510 provided by firefighters.Destruction from the quake, which injured at least 1,500 people, was centered in the cities of Ica and Pisco in Peru's southern desert, about 125 miles southeast of the capital of Lima. Garcia said at least 80,000 people were affected in some way, mostly through the destruction or damage of homes.At one end of a soccer field in Pisco, families who had lost everything huddled in a half-dozen makeshift shelters made of cardboard and blankets held up by wooden poles.
"We don't have water. The tents have not arrived," said Maria Tataja, 38, who shared an open-fronted shelter with nine other people. She shivered in the ocean breeze.Some people complained of price-gouging and said the cost of basic foods had doubled or tripled at the local market. Others arrived in Pisco's central square asking for canned milk and other goods but often left empty-handed.Soldiers stood guard at supply depots and tried to ensure that aid trucks made it to their destinations. Miguel Soto, a police officer standing guard in the Pisco stadium, said food donated by one Lima district had been raided on the traffic-clogged highway to Pisco. Many other food trucks simply weren't getting through, he said.Bulldozers and dump trucks tried to clear the streets as people hunted for food.Motorcycle taxi driver Marco Coila said he had moved his family out of Pisco to a village where they had hoped to find more food.
"There is nothing to eat. There is a lot of looting going on,"Coila said.Rescuers continued to pull bodies from the rubble of the San Clemente church in downtown Pisco, where hundreds had gathered for Mass when the quake struck Wednesday.But hopes of finding more survivors diminished.Paul Wooster, coordinator of the Rapid UK Rescue team from Gloucester, England, said rescuers were using sound detectors and infrared cameras to search mountains of rubble. The latest survivor discovered, a man, was pulled from the rubble at midday Friday."We always work on a four-day window, and I'm talking realistically. So we are still looking for survivors, but there's not much more time," Wooster said.The US dispatched medical teams,two mobile clinics and two helicopters, along with $150,000 to buy emergency supplies.
http://edition.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/americas/08/18/peru.earthquake.ap/index.html
As in the days of Noah...