Asian Tsunami Disaster
Thay đổi trang: 123 > >> | Trang 1 của 12 trang, bài viết từ 1 đến 15 trên tổng số 179 bài trong đề mục
HongYen 27.12.2004 05:48:29 (permalink)
Asian Quakes' Tsunami Kill More Than 7,000

Yahoo! News Sun, Dec 26, 2004
1 hour, 4 minutes ago World - AP Asia


By LELY T. DJUHARI, Associated Press Writer

JAKARTA, Indonesia - The world's most powerful earthquake in 40 years triggered massive tidal waves that slammed into villages and seaside resorts across southern and southeast Asia on Sunday, killing more than 7,000 people in six countries.


AP Photo


Reuters
Slideshow: Indonesia Quake Sparks Fatal Tidal Waves




Tourists, fishermen, homes and cars were swept away by walls of water up to 20 feet high that swept across the Bay of Bengal, unleashed by the 8.9-magnitude earthquake centered off the west coast of the Indonesian island of Sumatra.


In Sri Lanka, 1,000 miles west of the epicenter, more than 3,000 people were killed, the country's top police official said. At least 1,870 died in Indonesia, and 1,900 along the southern coasts of India. At least 198 were confirmed dead in Thailand, 42 in Malaysia and 2 in Bangladesh.


But officials expected the death toll to rise dramatically, with hundreds reported missing and all communications cut off to Sumatran towns closest to the epicenter. Hundreds of bodies were found on various beaches along India's southern state of Tamil Nadu, and more were expected to be washed in by the sea, officials said.


The rush of waves brought to sudden disaster to people carrying out their daily activities on the ocean's edge: Sunbathers on the beaches of the Thai resort of Phuket were washed away; a group of 32 Indians — including 15 children — were killed while taking a ritual Hindu bath to mark the full moon day; fishing boats, with their owners clinging to their sides, were picked up by the waves and tossed away.


"All the planet is vibrating" from the quake, said Enzo Boschi, the head of Italy's National Geophysics Institute. Speaking on SKY TG24 TV, Boschi said the quake even disturbed the Earth's rotation.


The U.S. Geological Survey (news - web sites) measured the quake at a magnitude of 8.9. Geophysicist Julie Martinez said it was the world's fifth-largest since 1900 and the largest since a 9.2 temblor hit Prince William Sound Alaska in 1964.


On Sumatra, the quake destroyed dozens of buildings — but as elsewhere, it was the wall of water that followed that caused the most deaths and devastation.


Tidal waves leveled towns in the province of Aceh on Sumatra's northern tip, the region closest to the epicenter. An Associated Press reporter saw bodies wedged in trees as the waters receded. More bodies littered the beaches.


Health ministry official Els Mangundap said 1,876 people had died across the region, including some 1,400 in the Aceh provincial capital, Banda Aceh. Communications to the town had been cut.


Relatives went through lines of bodies wrapped in blankets and sheets, searching for dead loved ones. Aceh province has long been the center of a violent insurgency against the government.


The worst known death toll so far was in Sri Lanka, where a million people were displaced from wrecked villages. Some 20,000 soldiers were deployed in relief and rescue and to help police maintain law and order. Police chief, Chandra Fernando said at least 3,000 people were dead in areas under government control.


"It is a huge tragedy," said Lalith Weerathunga, secretary to the Sri Lankan prime minister. "The death toll is going up all the time." He said the government did not know what was happening in areas of the northeast controlled by Tamil Tiger rebels.


An AP photographer saw two dozen bodies along a four-mile stretch of beach, some of children entangled in the wire mesh used to barricade seaside homes. Other bodies were brought up from the beach, wrapped in sarongs and laid on the road, while rows of men and women lined the roads asking if anyone had seen their relatives.


Around one million people were displaced from their homes, Weerathunga said.


In India, beaches were turned into virtual open-air mortuaries, with bodies of people caught in the tidal wave being washed ashore.


In Tamil Nadu state, just across the straits from Sri Lanka, 1,567 people were killed, said the state's top elected official, Chief Minister Jayaram Jayalalithaa.





Another 200 died in neighboring Andhra Pradesh state, 102 in Pondicherry and 28 others in Kerala and elsewhere, according to the governments in each state.

"I was shocked to see innumerable fishing boats flying on the shoulder of the waves, going back and forth into the sea, as if made of paper," said P. Ramanamurthy, 40, who lives in Andra Pradesh's Kakinada town. "I had never imagined anything like this could happen."

The huge waves struck around breakfast time on the beaches of Thailand's beach resorts — probably Asia's most popular holiday destination at this time of year, particularly for Europeans fleeing the winter cold — wiping out bungalows, boats and cars, sweeping away sunbathers and snorkelers, witnesses said.

"Initially we just heard a bang, a really loud bang," Gerrard Donnelly of Britain, a guest at Phuket island's Holiday Inn, told Britain's Sky News. "We initially thought it was a terrorist attack, then the wave came and we just kept running upstairs to get on as high ground as we could."

"People that were snorkeling were dragged along the coral and washed up on the beach, and people that were sunbathing got washed into the sea," said Simon Clark, 29, a photographer from London vacationing on Ngai island.

On Phi Phi island — where "The Beach" starring Leonardo DiCaprio was filmed — 200 bungalows at two resorts were swept out to sea.

"I am afraid that there will be a high figure of foreigners missing in the sea and also my staff," said Chan Marongtaechar, owner of the PP Princess Resort and PP Charlie Beach Resort.

Indonesia, a country of 17,000 islands, is prone to seismic upheaval because of its location on the margins of tectonic plates that make up the so-called the "Ring of Fire" around the Pacific Ocean basin.

The Indonesian quake struck just three days after an 8.1 quake struck the ocean floor between Australia and Antarctica, causing buildings to shake hundreds of miles away but no serious damage or injury.

Quakes reaching a magnitude 8 are very rare. A quake registering magnitude 8 rocked Japan's northern island of Hokkaido on Sept. 25, 2003, injuring nearly 600 people. An 8.4 magnitude tremor that stuck off the coast of Peru on June 23, 2001, killed 74.


Associated Press reporters Dilip Ganguly and Gemunu Amarasinghe in Colombo, Sri Lanka, K.N. Arun in Madras, India, and Sutin Wannabovorn in Phuket, Thailand, contributed to this report.

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&u=/ap/20041226/ap_on_re_as/indonesia_earthquake
<bài viết được chỉnh sửa lúc 04.01.2005 16:57:10 bởi HongYen >
#1
    HongYen 27.12.2004 16:37:26 (permalink)
    Thousands killed in Asia
    Dec. 26: The largest earthquake in 40 years has devastated large parts of Southeast Asia, with more than 11,000 dead after giant tidal waves swept into communities in Indonesia, Thailand, Sri Lanka, India and neighboring countries. NBC's Charles Sabine reports.

    Nightly News
    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6754820/
    #2
      HongYen 27.12.2004 16:40:05 (permalink)
      #3
        HongYen 27.12.2004 17:05:16 (permalink)
        .
        The aerial view of Marina beach after a tsunami triggered by an earthquake in the Indian Ov=cean hit the area in th southern Indian city of Madras


        Photo by Babu / Reuters

        [image]http://diendan.vnthuquan.net/upfiles/upfiles/1124/5F76177B135944898B99F5FEE087F208.jpg[/image]
        Attached Image(s)
        #4
          HongYen 28.12.2004 16:02:01 (permalink)
          Science - AP


          'Megathrust' Quake Severe, but No Surprise

          1 hour, 28 minutes ago Science - AP


          By JOSEPH B. VERRENGIA, AP Science Writer

          Scientists describe Sunday's devastating earthquake off the island of Sumatra as a "megathrust" — a grade reserved for the most powerful shifts in the Earth's crust. The term doesn't entirely capture the awesome power of the fourth largest earthquake since 1900, or the tsunami catastrophes it spawned for coastal areas around the Indian Ocean.


          AP Photo


          AP Photo
          Slideshow: Indonesia Quake Sparks Fatal Tidal Waves







          Surf in Secret
          Cover your tracks while online by knowing how 'they' watch you, and by keeping email private.




          Despite its awesome power, the quake itself was not much of a surprise, scientists said Monday.


          Sumatra is one of the most earthquake-prone places in the world, sitting atop one of the handful of sites where several plates of the planet's crust overlap and grind. Colossal pressures build up over decades, only to release in a snap.


          "These subduction zones are where all the world's biggest earthquakes are produced," said geologist Kerry Sieh of the California Institute of Technology. "Sunday was one of the biggest earthquakes in the region in the past 200 years."


          How powerful? By some estimates, it was equal to detonating a million atomic bombs.


          Sieh and other scientists said it probably jolted the planet's rotation. "It causes the planet to wobble a little bit, but it's not going to turn Earth upside down," Sieh said.


          Researchers also speculated on the extent to which the jolt might have changed Sumatra's coastline. Extensive damage and flooding was preventing investigators from immediately reaching the scene.


          Beneath the ocean, the flexible edges of the crustal plates might shifted vertically by as much as 60 feet relative to each other. But even that kind of displacement would lift or lower the Sumatran coast by only a few feet or less, they said, and sea levels would not change dramatically.


          "Basically, the run up of high tide will be just a little further up or further back," said Paul Earle, a geophysicist with the U.S. Geological Survey (news - web sites).


          But inland, ground levels in northern Sumatra might have changed noticeably in places, Sieh said.


          "As the block of land on top of subduction zone lurches out west toward the Indian Ocean, you expect that area behind it to sink," he said.


          Seismologists said the epicenter of Sunday's quake was more than 5.5 miles below the Indian Ocean off the west coast of Sumatra and about 150 miles south of the city of Bandah Aceh on the island's northern tip.


          Beneath the ocean floor, the quake occurred along a long north-south fault where the edge of the Indian plate dives below the Burma plate. A sea floor feature known as the Sunda Trench marks where the Indian plate begins its grinding decent into the Earth's hot mantle.


          Complicating matters, the edges of three other tectonic plates also bump here, with the Indian and Australian plates slowly sliding northwest relative to the Burma plate.


          A magnitude 8.0 earthquake on the island's southern tip was the most deadly tremor of 2000, causing at least 103 fatalities and more than 2,000 injuries. Giant quakes also rocked the area in 1797, 1833 and 1861.

          http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20041228/ap_on_sc/quake_seismic
          #5
            HongYen 28.12.2004 16:07:36 (permalink)
            Asian Disaster Death Toll Passes 22,000

            (AP) - Bodies washed up on tropical beaches and piled up in hospitals Monday, raising fears of disease across a 10-nation arc of destruction left by a monster earthquake and walls of water that killed more than 22,000 people. Thousands were missing and millions homeless. Humanitarian agencies began what the United Nations said would become the biggest relief effort the world has ever seen. More

            Mon, Dec 27, 2004
            http://story.news.yahoo.com/fc?cid=34&tmpl=fc&in=Science&cat=Asia_Tsunami_Disaster
            #6
              HongYen 29.12.2004 17:58:24 (permalink)
              38 minutes ago
              8:45pm, Tue Dec 28
              Yahoo! News Tue, Dec 28, 2004
              http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&u=/ap/20041229/ap_on_re_as/quake_tidal_wave


              Tsunami Death Toll Soars Past 58,000


              By LELY T. DJUHARI, Associated Press Writer

              BANDA ACEH, Indonesia - Thousands of bodies lay rotting and unidentified on lawns and streets of battered Sumatra island Wednesday and authorities called out bulldozers to dig mass graves, as the number killed in a mammoth earthquake and tsunami soared above 58,000 with tens of thousands still missing. The U.N. health agency warned that disease could double the toll yet again.......
              #7
                HongYen 29.12.2004 18:22:02 (permalink)




                By Reuters News, Indonesia dead around 27.000 people.
                .....

                29 Tháng 12 2004 - Cập nhật 00h22 GMT
                http://www.bbc.co.uk/vietnamese/regionalnews/story/2004/12/041229_indo.shtml
                #8
                  HongYen 30.12.2004 04:33:13 (permalink)
                  .

                  Homeless tsunami survivors cover their noses from the stench of rotting bodies as they leave the Indonesian city of Banda Aceh, on Wednesday.

                  Red Cross fears tsunami toll could top 100,000
                  'Disaster of unprecedented proportion' also brings threat of diseaseBREAKING NEWS
                  NBC News and news services
                  Updated: 9:49 a.m. ET Dec. 29, 2004BANDA ACEH, Indonesia - The Red Cross said Wednesday it feared the death toll in Sunday's earthquake and tsunamis in the Indian Ocean could top 100,000.

                  "We're facing a disaster of unprecedented proportion in nature," said Simon Missiri, Asia Pacific chief at the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

                  The agency said its current estimate is 77,000, but it fears that could rise.

                  Workers from Indonesia to India rushed to bury corpses to ward off disease Wednesday as cargo planes touched down with promised aid — from lentils to water purifiers — to help the region cope with the catastrophe.

                  Chances faded of finding more survivors of Sunday's massive, quake-driven walls of water — probably the deadliest in history.

                  "We have little hope, except for individual miracles," Chairman Jean-Marc Espalioux of the Accor hotel group said of the search for thousands of tourists and locals missing from beach resorts of southern Thailand — including 2,000 Scandinavians.

                  Threat of disease
                  Millions were homeless in the disaster, contending with hunger and the threat of disease, which the U.N. health agency said could double the toll.

                  ......

                  http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6754820/
                  #9
                    HongYen 01.01.2005 08:09:01 (permalink)


                    World Relief Efforts Reach Devastated Asia
                    AP - 3 minutes ago
                    n the News 11:02am, Fri Dec 31, 2004
                    Two U.S. Navy battle groups loaded with supplies headed for tsunami-ravaged coasts Friday and an airlift of dozens of flights brought help to this wrecked Indonesian city, as a huge world relief drive to shelter, treat and feed millions of survivors kicked in. The death toll passed 121,000 and was still climbing.
                    ....

                    http://news.yahoo.com/asiadisaster
                    #10
                      HongYen 01.01.2005 08:19:24 (permalink)


                      Tsunami Death Toll Reaches 125,000 By Scott Bobb
                      Bangkok
                      31 December 2004




                      Earthmovers clear debris of damaged houses at a fishermen's colony hit by tsunami, in Nagappattinam, Tamil Nadu, Friday

                      Relief officials are working feverishly to deliver food, water and medical supplies to parts of southern Asia hard-hit by Sunday's earthquake and tsunami. The largest relief effort in history is gearing up as the death toll from the disaster approaches 125,000. Regional leaders are planning to meet next week to coordinate efforts.

                      The death toll continues to mount and hope for thousands of missing people is fading, as relief agencies rush aid and workers to the region.

                      Some 12 countries around the Indian Ocean were affected by Sunday's magnitude nine quake and follow-on tsunamis.

                      .....

                      http://www.voanews.com/english/2004-12-31-voa8.cfm



                      #11
                        HongYen 01.01.2005 08:21:10 (permalink)

                        .....

                        Last Updated: Friday, 31 December, 2004, 18:30 GMT

                        E-mail this to a friend Printable version

                        Push to speed up tsunami relief

                        The needs of the people are awesome
                        World leaders are stepping up global plans to help millions of survivors of the Indian Ocean tsunami which killed more than 124,000 people.
                        UN Secretary General Kofi Annan and US Secretary of State Colin Powell are to discuss co-ordinating the aid effort.

                        The White House announced it would raise the US contribution to the tsunami victims tenfold - to $350m.

                        New Year festivities were cancelled in several affected countries where memorial services were held.


                        Thousands are still missing after a huge undersea earthquake struck off the Indonesian island of Sumatra on Sunday, sending giant waves smashing into coastlines from Malaysia to East Africa.

                        ....

                        http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/4136781.stm

                        #12
                          HongYen 01.01.2005 09:27:48 (permalink)
                          The numbers in the above map mean:
                          1. Indonesia: 79,940
                          2. Sri Lanka: 28,508
                          3. India (inc Andaman and Nicobar Is): 10,763
                          4. Thailand: 4,541 5. Somalia: 120
                          6. Burma: 90
                          7. Maldives: 67
                          8. Malaysia: 65 9. Tanzania: 10
                          10. Seychelles: 1
                          11. Bangladesh: 2
                          12. Kenya: 1

                          NATURAL DISASTERS
                          2004: Asian quake disaster - more than 124,000 dead
                          2003: Earthquake in Bam, Iran, officially kills 26,271
                          1976: Earthquake in Tangshan, China, kills 242,000
                          1970: Cyclone in Bangladesh kills 500,000
                          1923: Tokyo earthquake kills 140,000
                          1887: China's Yellow River breaks its banks in Huayan Kou killing 900,000
                          1826: Tsunami kills 27,000 in Japan
                          1815: Volcanic eruption of Mount Tambora on Indonesia's Sumbawa Island kills 90,000
                          1556: Earthquake in China's Shanxi and Henan provinces kills 830,000

                          http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4138763.stm
                          #13
                            HongYen 01.01.2005 11:33:53 (permalink)
                            Bush Pledges $350 Million in Aid to Stricken Areas of Asia
                            By DAVID E. SANGER

                            Published: December 31, 2004


                            RAWFORD, Texas, Dec. 31 - President Bush announced today a ninefold increase in emergency aid to stricken areas of Asia, bringing the federal government's commitment to $350 million, and he said the United States would probably add more resources as the scope of what he called an "epic disaster" became clearer.




                            Mr. Bush's action is the second time this week that the United States committed more funds to the effort, and it came after mounting criticism that the president, who has stayed on his 1,600-acre ranch all week and spoken publicly about the disaster once, had reacted too slowly.

                            .....

                            http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/31/international/worldspecial4/31cnd-diplo.html?ex=1105160400&en=d49dc83fb1f946c8&ei=5040&partner=MOREOVERNEWS


                            <bài viết được chỉnh sửa lúc 01.01.2005 11:34:59 bởi HongYen >
                            #14
                              HongYen 01.01.2005 15:03:36 (permalink)
                              Indian woman becomes "Angel of the Seas" in tsunami-hit Andamans

                              3 minutes ago Asia - AFP
                              Yahoo! News 5:50pm Fri, Dec 31, 2004


                              PORT BLAIR, India (AFP) - An Indian woman in the Andaman Islands has become the centre of a multi-nation effort by ham operators to unite thousands of families separated by the killer waves.


                              AFP Photo



                              Latest Headlines:
                              Indian woman becomes "Angel of the Seas" in tsunami-hit Andamans AFP - 3 minutes ago


                              · Powell, Philbin to Lead NYC Celebration
                              AP - 10 minutes ago



                              Special Coverage





                              The Andamans account for about a third of India's reported death toll of 11,330 but thousands more are missing or have been separated from families in the archipelago's 572 islands because of massive damage to harbours, bridges and local ferry services.


                              A grateful Indian army is supporting 46-year-old Bharti Prasad with gear and batteries as the Delhi-based housewife has networked ham operators across the nations to reunite families and help in relief and rescue operations.
                              ......
                              #15
                                Thay đổi trang: 123 > >> | Trang 1 của 12 trang, bài viết từ 1 đến 15 trên tổng số 179 bài trong đề mục
                                Chuyển nhanh đến:

                                Thống kê hiện tại

                                Hiện đang có 0 thành viên và 3 bạn đọc.
                                Kiểu:
                                2000-2025 ASPPlayground.NET Forum Version 3.9