family whenever we went to new york, the boys, to sean. he was just he i tell you, there s two sides to him. he could fire someone in a second. we prevented him from firing someone. there was a security guard, wouldn t letmy two boys on the field. of course, they didn t have passes larry, thank you. larry: he went up we re out of time. larry s back tomorrow. time for anderson cooper and ac 360. we re live in port-au-prince keeping them honest. thousands of people are spending yet another night in darkness in plastic tarp-covered shelters. more permanent, but very much like they were six months ago. we re still trying to understand why exactly that is. why more than 1.5 million people are living this way after so many people, so many organizations and governments either rushed to help or promised to. we re following the money tonight. $5.3 billion promised by countries around the world for rebuilding. just $89 million received to far.
given food distributions but they run out very quickly. the people are traumatized. the people are anxious about their future. reporter: tensions made worse by the fact that a powerful storm just ripped through the camp, destroying hundreds of tents. i ve never seen anything like it because people were screaming and panicking and praying. reporter: this wasn t supposed to happen at camp corail. after all, so far, it s the only so-called planned camp for the homeless in the entire country. the hope of corail and the hope of future is this is an economic model that will bring people out of port-au-prince that can be replicated in another part of the country. this is hope for the future, you know. reporter: organizers built the camp on a scorching hot plain, out of port-au-prince. it was supposed to help reduce overcrowding in a city bursting with slums due to decades of uncontrolled growth. how are the conditions here? bad. bad. reporter: the camp s remote location left peo
alley strand, miles away from any real source of employment. and this is the only job in this camp? only job in this camp, only. nothing better than that. nothing. no more money, $5 a day. reporter: $5 a day. even payment of some of these salaries is behind schedule. and so is construction of the temporary shelters which were supposed to replace these tents. and there was, until monday, a prefabricated temporary model house here on display for locals to see where they d eventually end up living. the storm hit, the winds blew it over, ripped the walls off and it ended up all the way over here. one of the guards who was inside at the time has been hospitalized because his shoulder was broken in the storm. it s not okay, with the kids, family. reporter: you don t think this house is safe for you? no, it s not safe. reporter: if it s supposed to be a model camp is poorly
been affected by the earthquake, others are orphaned. 2500 boys and girls are registered with international aid groups searching the country trying to reunite kids with their families. gary tuchman is following the story of one young boy. reporter: 4-year-old jon lost his mother in the haiti earthquake. his father is also gone. no one seems to know if he s dead or alive. for now, he lives in a tent in a homeless camp with a family who lived near his mother. supplies are short, providing food and water for the little boy is difficult enough. but these two workers with international rescue committee are looking to see if his father is somewhere out there. they are among dozens of caseworkers from international aid groups who look for parent and children separated by the earthquake. so, they re basically doing the work of detectives. they re pounding the crumbling pavement, looking for any clues about the whereabouts of jon s father. they have an image of the boy in a camera, in the nei
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