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(15 Jan 2010) SHOTLIST ++NIGHT SHOTS++ 1. Various of aid planes on tarmac 2. Various of aid being unloaded at night 3. Wide of aid plane shortly after landing 4. SOUNDBITE (English) Rene Preval, Haitian President: "I am very sad because a lot of people died, a lot of people are suffering and I am very sad because my country is in great difficulty. But, I am very happy also to see how the world is with us, is helping us." 5. Airplane on tarmac shortly after landing 6. Officials walking towards plane 7. Mid of UN soldiers on tarmac 8. Wide of UN armoured personnel carrier 9. Mid of UN soldier in vehicle 10. Various of makeshift camp where people left homeless by quake have settled 11.Various of people laying on makeshift bed in camp 12. Various of children playing in makeshift camp STORYLINE: The Haitian President expressed his gratitude on Thursday for the international aid that has started to pour into the earthquake ravaged country. The international Red Cross estimated that up to 50-thousand people were killed in Tuesday''s magnitude-7.0 earthquake. However, there are easily hundreds, and perhaps thousands, of people still trapped, living or dead, in collapsed buildings. Rene Preval, Haitian President said he was extremely saddened by the number of deaths. "I am very sad because my country is in great difficulty. But, I am very happy also to see how the world is with us, is helping us," Preval said from the Port-au-Prince airport late on Thursday. Some 40 search-and-rescue teams from around the world were on the ground in Haiti on Thursday, looking for survivors trapped inside collapsed buildings. But to find and save people, the rescuers need heavy machinery to lift tons of rubble - equipment that teams from places like Britain and Iceland have, but others don''t. In the meantime, friends and relatives who survived the quake have been searching through the wreckage, often with bare hands, in an effort to find missing loved ones. Relief supplies and emergency experts did start to pour into Haiti from around the world on Thursday, but aid groups said the challenge of helping Haiti''s desperate quake survivors was enormous. Aid deliveries by ship were impossible to Port-au-Prince because the Haitian capital''s port was closed due to severe damage from Tuesday''s quake. The city''s airport was open but damaged, labouring mightily to handle a flurry of incoming aid flights. Some 60 aid flights had arrived by midday Thursday, but they then had to contend with an overloaded Toussaint L''Ouverture International Airport. At midday, the Federal Aviation Administration said it was temporarily halting all civilian flights from the US at Haiti''s request, because the airport was jammed and jet fuel was limited for return flights. The control tower had been destroyed in Tuesday''s tremor, complicating air traffic. Civilian relief flights were later allowed to resume however and Preval was on hand as more aid was flown into the country on Thursday. Nearby displaced residents gathered for the night in makeshift camps amid piles of salvaged goods, including food scavenged from the rubble. Throughout Port-au-Prince people gather in similar makeshift camps, most of which still have seen no signs of promised food or potable water. Keyword: Haiti Earthquake Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork Twitter: / ap_archive Facebook: / aparchives Instagram: / apnews You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/you...