Tweeting: eyewitness accounts

AS IN other humanitarian disasters, social networking sites were inundated with eyewitness reports from Haiti, as well as expressions…

AS IN other humanitarian disasters, social networking sites were inundated with eyewitness reports from Haiti, as well as expressions of support from people outside the country.

With telephone lines down, local people turned to Facebook and Twitter to alert the world and to attempt to reach family and friends who were missing.

Shortly after the earthquake hit at about 4.53pm local time (9.53pm Irish time), people began tweeting about the damage to buildings in the Haitian capital Port-au-Prince.

Among them was Troy Livesay, a country director for the non-profit organisation World Wide Village. Minutes after the earthquake hit he tweeted "just experienced a MAJOR earthquake here in Port au Prince – walls were falling down – we are ALL fine – pray for those in the slums . . ." In an update a short time later he said a friend had managed to reach them where they were who had seen "many dead bodies and injured along the way". And still later: "The sun went down shortly after the big quake. It is up now. It is eerily quiet."

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Another person tweeting from the Haitian capital was Richard Auguste Morse, a musician and hotel manager: "Just about all the lights are out in Port-au- Prince . . . people still screaming but the noise is dying as darkness sets." He later added: "Another aftershock . . . a little longer . . . much screaming downtown . . . this is going to be a long night."

The twitter updates highlighted the fear many Haitians felt about the aftershocks. "Was in the streets during that last aftershock. People were terrified, screaming and running in every possible direction," said sound engineer Frédéric Dupoux. He later tweeted: "Everybody camping in the streets of Port-au-Prince sleeping under stars to wake up from an awful nightmare."

Elsewhere, local radio and TV host Carel Pedreencouraged people from outside Haiti to contact him if they wanted information on friends and colleagues.

Meanwhile, former Fugees singer Wyclef Jean, a Haitian, was among those living outside the country who called on twitter users to donate money to charities helping to alleviate the suffering of people in the country. Many of those humanitarian organisations also used social networking sites to appeal for donations.

Charlie Taylor

Charlie Taylor

Charlie Taylor is a former Irish Times business journalist