BBC news with Marry Small. Emergency aid is finally reaching some parts of Haiti's devastated capital Port-au-Prince with relief workers and the US military (distributing) water and food to victims of Tuesday's earthquake. But demand is still far out stripping supply. Michelle /, the (head) of / / in Haiti, says that there are problems tring to get aid materials into the airport. She was asked what the charity was managing to (achieve). There are still thousands of people waiting for treatments. We've done everything we can with the means that we have now to treat as many people as possible. The priority right now is still to get people to /. So now we will be starting to set up our hospital. It's a hundred-bed hospital with two operating (theatres) and tens of care work and a emergency room, and we will be able to hospitalize the patients following the surgical intervention. / bell from the Haitian caipital, here's Nick Davis. In this high Christian country, there are still songs of prays being sung in church. But also prayers for the died and dying. The rescur operations continue to pull out survivors. But as the days, hours and minutes pass, hopes fade. This is the largest international (rescue) operation ever undertaken. But already some countries are pulling out as the likelihood of finding people alive diminishes. Gangs of Muslim and Christian youth have clashed in the Central Nigerian city of Jos. The scene of religious and ethnic riots in 2008. Churches and mosques were (burned). At least seven people are reported have been killed and many injured. Caroline Duffield reports from Lagos. The (violence) erupted in the western part of the city of Jos. One aid worker who spoke to the BBC said at least fifty-eight people had been taken to hospital. Many of them suffering from / wounds. Riot police and the Nigerian military even posed a dusk to dawn (curfew). Jos has been the scene of repeated clashes between different communities in recent years. The violence is often blamed on sectarianism between Muslims and Christians. But in reality, it is nearly always about economic rivalries, land (ownership) and a battle for political power between different communities. The leader of Guinea's military govenment Capitain Moussa Dadis Camara has (confirmed) that he supports the deal let hands power to his deputy and paves the way for a return to civilian rule. Speaking in Burkina Faso, where he has been recuperating from an assassination attempt, Capitain Camara called for reconciliation and (urged) Guineans to support domocracy. On Friday, he agreed not to return to Guinea for the time being. Guinea's opposition leaders have welcomed the deal. World news from the BBC. The Islamic Solidarity Games which is due to be held in Iran in April have been canceled because of the dispur between Iran and Arab countries of how to refer to the Gulf. The Saudi Arabian based Games' federation said the Iranian organizers have failed to address its concerns particularly over the planned (logo) and medals. The / striked with the words Persian Gulf. Arab countries rejected this as a description, calling it The Arabian Gulf. Exit polls published after the end of voting in the Ukrainian presidential election suggest that no (candidate) has won an outright majority. But the current President Viktor Yushchenko has been eliminated. There will be a secong round of voting on February 7th. Gabriel Gatehouse reports fron Kiev. If the exit polls are correct, then Viktor Yanukovich will face the current Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko in a runoff on 7th of February. She was instrumental in bringing the current President Viktor Yushchenko to power during the Orange Revolution. Now though, his support has evaporated, and she's (portraying) herself as the inheritor of The Orange Mental. But the most remarkable transformation has been for Viktor Yushchenko. Five years ago, he was portrayed as the / of the Orange Revolution, tarnished by allegations of vote tricking and open support from Moscow. Now though, both leading candidates here favour a closer tie with the Kremlin after five years of rising (tensions). Pope Banedict has once again defend the Vatican's conduct during the Second World War, saying that the Roman Catholic church often provided what he called hidden and (discreet) help to Jews threatened by the Nazi holocaust. The pope was speaking while visiting Rome's main synagogue, only the secong time a Roman Catholic primate has done so. The visit has caused controversy among some Jewish groups. The pope's decision to move his war time criticizer pious for twelve closer to (centrehood) has angered some Jewish groups.