For countless citizens here in <strong>Haiti’s</strong> pulverized capital, new rules of hunger etiquette are emerging. Stealing food, it is widely known, might get you killed. Children are most likely to return with something to eat, but no matter what is found, or how hungry the forager, everything must be shared.

Grieving families are watching workers recover the bodies of loved ones as Haiti’s death roll rises, while aid groups focusing on the living struggle to find tents and sites to erect them for all the people streaming out of Port-au-Prince.

<strong>Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez</strong> Wednesday accused the United States of causing the destruction in Haiti by testing a ‘tectonic weapon’ to induce the catastrophic earthquake that hit the country last week.

A powerful new earthquake struck <strong>Haiti</strong> on Wednesday, shaking rubble from damaged buildings and sending screaming people running into the streets only eight days after the country’s capital was devastated by an apocalyptic quake.

The death toll from the earthquake in <strong>Haiti</strong> last week is now estimated to be over 200,000

U.S. authorities are readying for a potential influx of <strong>Haitians</strong> seeking to escape their earthquake-wracked nation, even though the policy for migrants remains the same: with few exceptions, they will go back.

Drumbeats called the faithful to a Sunday Mass behind mounds of rubble and amid the few remaining walls of Port-au-Prince’s destroyed Roman Catholic cathedral to listen to a sermon in a scene resembling the Apocalypse.

With food, water and other aid flowing intoHaiti in earnest, relief groups and officials are focused on moving the supplies out of the clogged airport and to hungry, haggard earthquake survivors in the capital.

U.S. cell phone users have contributed more than $5 million in $10 increments to the <strong>Red Cross for Haiti disaster relief</strong>, by far the largest outpouring of support via mobile devices in history.