Asian Tsunami Disaster
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HongYen 30.05.2005 02:51:59 (permalink)
Clinton in Maldives On Tour of Post-Tsunami Reconstruction

By VOA News
28 May 2005



Bill Clinton during a press conference in Colombo


Former U.S. President Bill Clinton is in the Maldive Islands, southwest of India, his third stop on a United Nations tour to promote reconstruction in the wake of December's devastating tsunami.

Mr. Clinton was met at the airport by Maldive President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom after a flight from Sri Lanka. He is visiting the region as a special U.N. envoy.

On Sunday, he will tour hard-hit areas of the atoll nation.

The former president arrived in the capital, Male, after endorsing a plan by Sri Lanka's president for the government and Tamil Tiger rebels to jointly distribute foreign aid to victims of the tsunami, which killed 31,000 people in Sri Lanka.

Mr. Clinton began his regional trip in India. From the Maldives he will visit Indonesia's battered Aceh province.

Some information for this report provided by AP and Reuters.

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Former President Bill Clinton at a temporary shelter for tsunami affected people in Nagappattinam, India


Clinton Cancels Visit to Tsunami-Hit Areas of Maldives
By VOA News
29 May 2005

Former U.S. President Bill Clinton has canceled a scheduled visit to tsunami-hit areas of the Maldive Islands for reasons that are still not entirely clear.

Mr. Clinton is touring four Indian Ocean nations in his role as special United Nations envoy for tsunami relief. The former president arrived Saturday in the Maldives after visiting Sri Lanka.

He will have scheduled meetings in the capital, Male, with government officials and business leaders to discuss tsunami relief efforts.

One U.N. spokeswoman said Mr. Clinton, who had heart surgery last September, canceled his visit to the tsunami-hit areas because he is suffering from exhaustion. But others said the trip was called off because of poor weather in the area.

The former president will leave the Maldives later Sunday for Indonesia on the last leg of his tour.

Some information for this report provided by AP and AFP.

http://www.voanews.com/english/2005-05-29-voa13.cfm
<bài viết được chỉnh sửa lúc 30.05.2005 10:01:38 bởi HongYen >
HongYen 30.05.2005 02:59:11 (permalink)
U.S. researchers design tsunami-resistant house


Thu May 26, 6:55 PM ET


BOSTON (Reuters) - U.S. researchers have designed a house they say is better able to withstand a tidal wave and are planning to build 1,000 of them in Sri Lanka, one of the countries hit by last year's deadly tsunami.

Carlo Ratti, a teacher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was at a wedding in Sri Lanka when the tsunami struck the region last December. When he returned to MIT, he worked on the design of the "tsunami-safe(r) house" with colleagues at his school, Harvard University and British engineering firm Buro Happold.

"The goal was low-tech construction with high-tech design," Ratti, a civil engineer who heads MIT's SENSEable City Laboratory, told Reuters on Thursday.

"We came up with a design that is five times stronger than traditional (Sri Lankan) houses."

SENSEable and the Prajnopaya Foundation, a Buddhist nonprofit group, plan to build about 1,000 of the houses in Sri Lanka. Using the same type of materials typically used in the construction of traditional Sri Lankan homes, the more robust structures consist of four reinforced concrete pillars supporting a tin or tile roof.

The open design is stronger, Ratti said, because it would not block the flow of water were another tsunami to hit.

"Four small cores are stronger than a big one," he said.

The tsunami killed more than 180,000 people throughout Asia, with nearly 40,000 dead or presumed dead in Sri Lanka.

It devastated much of the island's coast and 100,000 people still live in makeshift shelters nearly five months later.

"The problem in Sri Lanka is the government wants to relocate people from the coast further inland," Ratti said.

"This would come at a huge social, cultural, environmental and economic cost. So the aim of this project is to investigate technological strategies that could guarantee safety at lower cost," he said.

Each house would cost between $1,000 and $1,500 to build.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20050526/india_nm/india_203732
HongYen 30.05.2005 03:09:07 (permalink)
Sunday May 29, 04:26 AM

Lucky tsunami survivors begin moving to new homes

HIKKADUWA, Sri Lanka (Reuters) - Stumbling in the tropical heat after a 40-hour flight from St. Louis in the United States, volunteers from the evangelical charity Service International have been put right to work building homes for Sri Lankan tsunami survivors.

Working alongside rehabilitating heroin addicts from a Sri Lankan Christian activist group, they are building simple 336-square-foot cement block homes in Hikkaduwa, a budget beach resort on Sri Lanka's tsunami-battered southwest coast.

"Our dream is to build 100 homes," said Ed Fasnacht, Service International's supervisor for the project. "There's 55,000 homes that need to be built, so there's plenty of room for everyone."

The cement block homes with asbestos roof tiles are going up in the midst of temporary wooden shacks, which house the survivors now. Across the street is one of the many tiny, tattered tent camps that dot Sri Lanka's coastline.

This neighbourhood, where 14 of the 21 tsunami victims were children, is home to a group of Tamil Hindus and Christians who come from the lowest strata of society.

But they are among the first of Sri Lanka's half-million people displaced in the disaster to get permanent homes. And so the last shall be first.

The project illustrates certain features of the recovery effort after one of the strongest earthquakes in history set off a colossal tsunami last December 26 that killed an estimated 228,000 people in a dozen Indian Ocean nations.

Five months after the disaster, the reconstruction effort has barely begun.

Progress has been uneven, leading to concerns about how equitable the effort is. And it is being spearheaded by private aid groups, many of them little-known outfits such as Service International working with local counterparts.

Billions of dollars in private aid raised across the world -- from girl scout raffles, bowling leagues, Rotarians and Unitarians, Jewish bake sales and Islamic charities -- are being channelled to a veritable Noah's Ark of aid groups.

HOME AT LAST FOR SEA GYPSIES

As in Sri Lanka, one of the most disadvantaged groups in Thailand has been among the early settlers into permanent quarters.

With money raised by Thai students, the Moken, a tribe of sea gypsies who had mostly lived in self-contained houseboats, have shifted into new homes on stilts, with thatched bamboo walls and insulated tin roofs outside Ban Nam Khem, a coastal town nearly obliterated by the giant waves.

"We're happy with the new homes," said Sewbee Leeskoon, 52. "The walls are nice, the roof is strong and we really like the balcony because you can see everyone now."

In an adjacent neighbourhood, another band of sea gypsies has begun moving into a new one-storey apartment complex with its own clinic, kindergarten and meeting hall.

Thailand's ITV television network funded this project.

Indonesia, where the tsunami is feared to have killed 160,000 people, has yet to start building permanent homes.

At least a third of the nearly 600,000 displaced survivors are living in squalid tent camps. Another 60,000-70,000 are in military-style barracks.

The rest are staying with friends and relatives, where five months after the calamity they are wearing out their welcome and drifting into the camps.

Kuntoro Mangasubroto, chairman of Indonesia's reconstruction agency, complained bitterly about how slow lawmakers and bureaucrats in Jakarta have been to allocate money for the recovery. "They have no sense of urgency," he fumed in an interview with Reuters.

But Fasnacht at Service International said it's not all that unusual. The group, which has worked in Kosovo, also sent volunteers to Florida after four hurricanes hit the state in a matter of months last year.

"We're still struggling to get permits to build homes there," he said.

OUTSOURCING AID EFFORT

The Sri Lankan government is effectively outsourcing the recovery effort, leaving nearly $3 billion of pledged reconstruction aid in donor hands.

Its job is to provide the land, hand out permits and ensure building codes are met, said Mano Tittawella, chairman of the island's reconstruction agency, in an interview.

Carlo Ratti, a teacher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, may pose a challenge to Sri Lankan building codes with his design for a "tsunami safe(r) house.

MIT's SENSEable City Laboratory, in partnership with a Buddhist NGO, plans to build 1,000 of the houses, whose open design would not block the flow of water were another tsunami to hit.

Service International has put up 10 houses designed after a typical Sri Lankan village home and is building 10 more, after its local partner -- Voice of New Life Without Drugs -- managed to secure building permits from the provincial government.

They plan to keep doing that -- with different groups of volunteers who pay their own airfare, food and lodging -- for months.

"We eat the elephant one bite at a time," said Fasnacht, a father of four from St. Louis.

Nilmini, a mother of three, is one of 40,000 Sri Lankan tsunami survivors still in tent camps, down from a half-million just after the disaster.

She's hoping to get a cement block house and would be just as happy if it was far from the sea.

"I'm scared of the sea and my children are scared of the sea. They won't go near it," she said.

Various donors will build 55,000 houses for those like Nilmini, who lived by the beach. Rebuilding on the shore is now banned as a safeguard against any repeat tsunami.

Tittawella said he expects to have most of the displaced in permanent homes by early next year, although some experts think that this is too optimistic.

But Nilmini frets that after baking in her tent for so long, she will soon have to cope with a flooded camp now that the monsoon has started. Her husband, a barber before the calamity, is not working.

"I'm worried all the time and sad. I worry whether we'll ever get a permanent house."

http://uk.news.yahoo.com/050529/325/fk085.html

HongYen 30.05.2005 03:24:04 (permalink)
Designing safer houses in Asia


CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) -- Not long after the devastating December tsunami, a team of structural engineers from London visited Sri Lanka and noticed a trend as they surveyed destroyed homes: Walls facing the sea were leveled, while those perpendicular to it were standing.

That inspired a group of researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University to design what they're calling a "tsunami-safe(r) house" that is less likely to collapse under wind and pounding surf.

Instead of having four solid walls, the tsunami-resistant houses have thick concrete-block corners and exterior walls made of bamboo. The houses, about 80 of which have already been built, are designed to be built on top of blocks of concrete or wood, one or two feet above the ground.

The design allows waves to wash through the bamboo walls while the concrete structure of the house remains standing, said Carlo Ratti, director of MIT's Senseable City Laboratory.

"Of course, you would have water in the house, and there is no way to avoid that, but the houses will be much more resilient," Ratti said.

Buro Happold, a London-based engineering firm, used computer models to show that the houses would be five times more resistant to a tsunami than Sri Lanka's traditional homes.

"When the wave comes through, the water flushes everything out, but the walls remain standing," said Domenico del Re, a structural engineer at Buro Happold.

The design is for a home measuring about 400 square feet that would cost roughly $1,200 to build. It was designed to be made from materials readily available in Sri Lanka.

--Mike Kunzelman, Associated Press Writer

http://www.detnews.com/2005/technology/0505/29/0tech-193801.htm
HongYen 30.05.2005 13:54:07 (permalink)
Clinton to Seek Tsunami Help for Maldives

By SHIMALI SENANAYAKE, Associated Press Writer
Sun May 29, 3:59 PM ET

KURUMBA, Maldives - Former President Clinton said Sunday he would ask donors to help fully restore water and sanitation services in the tsunami-ravaged Maldives, a day after he canceled a visit to areas struck by the huge waves in the Indian Ocean archipelago.


Clinton, who was recently named special U.N. envoy for tsunami recovery, met with the United Nations' country office team and later with business leaders and civil society representatives. After the meetings, he said his first job would be "to try and get commitments from donors to fill the gaps, particularly in water and sanitation."

He also pledged to do what he can to "restore tourism and diversify the economy."

The Maldives needs $406 million for reconstruction over the next three years, but has so far only received $79 million in aid.

The government says donors may be ignoring the Maldives because the number killed there in the Dec. 26 tsunami was much lower than that of other countries. A total of 82 people died when the huge waves crashed into the nation of about 1,200 low-lying islands off southern India, while another 26 remain missing and are presumed dead.

But the tsunami affected one-third of the archipelago's 290,000 people and only nine of its 199 inhabited islands were spared destruction. The tourism industry, the Maldives' biggest moneymaker, was devastated as vacationers shunned its beaches.

"A lot of people have not been convinced yet that the Maldives and some of the other places hit by the tsunami are open for business and perfectly safe," Clinton said.

The former U.S. leader appeared rested after canceling a trip to meet with tsunami survivors and pushing back a string of meetings with business leaders and civil groups at the Kurumba luxury resort, near the Maldives' capital, Male.

A visit to the Fonadhoo island — where the tsunami tore away a seawall and turned the island's settlement into a ghost town — was called off late Saturday, as was a trip to meet survivors who had moved to a neighboring island, linked to Fonadhoo by a causeway.

Some officials said the cancellation was due to bad weather while others said Clinton, who had a heart bypass operation in September, was exhausted.

The former president's visit coincided with the start of the monsoon season, and the country's meteorology department had forecast intermittent rain showers and moderate seas on Sunday.

Erskine Bowles, Clinton's former chief of staff and deputy to the ex-president in his role as special U.N. envoy for tsunami recovery, said Clinton was set to travel Monday to the Indonesian city of Banda Aceh — hardest hit by the disaster.

Clinton is on a four-day trip to India, Sri Lanka, the Maldives and Indonesia to ensure that aid is being distributed fairly and efficiently, and to try keeping the world's attention on tsunami recovery.

The Dec. 26 earthquake and tsunami killed more than 176,000 people in 11 countries, and left about 50,000 missing and hundreds of thousands homeless.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050529/ap_on_re_as/clinton
HongYen 31.05.2005 18:14:12 (permalink)
[image]http://us.news3.yimg.com/us.i2.yimg.com/p/nm/20050531/mdf572648.jpg?[/image]

Reuters Photo: A tribal Indian tsunami survivor sits inside a relief camp in the badly affected Car...



Paradise lost tsunami crushes age-old Indian tribe

By Simon Denyer
Mon May 30, 2:20 AM ET

CAR NICOBAR, India (Reuters) - For thousands of years India's gentle Nicobarese tended their coconut plantations and reared pigs on the sandy shores of their island paradise

Today, the tribespeople have turned their backs on the sea, and may be turning their backs on their ancient way of life.

The tsunami that struck their shores five months ago not only killed thousands of Nicobarese, it cracked the very foundations of their economy and their society.

"People have not come out of their shock and trauma," said Samuel Stephen, a 35-year-old a government worker from the flattened village of Mus on the northern tip of Car Nicobar.

"People are scared by the sound of the waves at night. Even the noise of buses and trucks at odd hours gets them up," he said. "But the worst change is in their behavior. They have started drinking too much."

Driving along the eastern coast of Car Nicobar, on a rare visit by a foreign journalist -- even Indians need permits to come here -- the physical wounds feel almost as fresh as ever. The bodies may have been cleared away, but little else seems to have changed since Dec. 26.

The gaping shell of a medical center is surrounded by sand, rubble and fallen coconut palms, all that remains of the bustling village of Lalpathy. A small sign has been erected to "Erstwhile Lalpathy," lest its residents forget where they once lived.

Village after village has been literally wiped off the map.

Officially, at least 850 people died on this Indian Ocean island out of a population of 19,000. Privately, officials admit the toll may have been much higher.

CLOSE-KNIT SOCIETY

The Nicobarese fled inland to escape the tsunami's wrath. And that is where they remain today, in mosquito-infested relief camps in the forests or, increasingly, in government-built shelters supposed to protect them from the monsoon rains.

They used to fish, diving from dugouts with harpoons and masks, or casting lines in deeper water for the bigger fish. Five months on, scarcely a boat has returned to the sea.

Tens of thousands of coconut trees, the lifeblood of the economy, were toppled by the waves. It will take 10 years for the plantations to grow back, and replanting is only just beginning.

But the profoundest change could come if the tribe is unable to rebuild what was once a close-knit society built around the extended family, or "tuhet," where villagers would help each other without asking for money, in the old days.

"We are lacking identity and we don't want to help each other any more," said tribal youth leader Henry Samuel. "In a war, people run for their own safety."

Gone are the communal huts where family life was focused and the tuhet head lived. Today, government-built shelters have forced the Nicobarese into nuclear families -- and undermined their traditions.

TRIBALS WANT SETTLERS OUT

Car Nicobar lies 1,300 km (800 miles) off India's east coast, in the middle of the Andaman and Nicobar chain. Its "Mongoloid" people probably came from China or Southeast Asia 18,000 years ago, and were converted to Christianity under British rule.

Outsiders are forbidden without a permit. But thousands of mainlanders settled here anyway, legally or illegally, running shops and working as labourers.

Hundreds of settlers died on Dec. 26. and the rest were evacuated to the mainland. Nicobarese chiefs say their people were being exploited by the more commercially-savvy mainlanders, and now want their islands to themselves.

"The influx has to be controlled," said Thomas Philip, the secretary of the Car Nicobar tribal council. "These people should be sent away from our place and whatever business they have should be stopped."

The government gave about 15,000 rupees ($350) compensation to tribespeople who lost their homes and is slowly handing out up to 200,000 rupees each to widows and orphans and 4,000 for every 175 coconut trees lost to the waves.

Most Nicobarese are too gentle and too humble to complain.

But gradually they open up to the outsider: government rations -- mostly rice and lentils -- are scarcely enough and the compensation for agricultural losses hopelessly inadequate.

Worse, much of the cash goes on liquor, at inflated costs.

"In the beginning, there was paradise, and Eve plucked the fruit," said Samuel. "In Car Nicobar, the fruit is liquor, and everyone is going to have it."

There are no simple answers for the Nicobars, home to 36,000 tribespeople and an unknown number of settlers before Dec. 26.

Delhi has announced ambitious plans to encourage the islanders to diversify into cashews, spices or commercial fishing. Philip and his tribal council want training so his people work as plumbers, tailors or even run beauty parlours.

Samir Acharya of the Society for Andaman and Nicobar Ecology worries the Nicobarese, used to a life of leisure under the palms, are being forced to join the modern world too quickly, and the pressures could destroy their society.

Help them replant, rebuild and then leave them alone, he says: "You can't change a whole society overnight.

But Philip knows it may already be too late. The quiet coconut farmers in this paradise may soon join the modern world.

"There is no other way, sir," he says, with a resigned smile.

($1 = 43.5 rupees)

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20050530/lf_nm/tsunami_india_nicobarese_dc

[image]http://diendan.vnthuquan.net/upfiles/1124/E2D9F620B968447F84A0BC2846946E70.jpg[/image]
<bài viết được chỉnh sửa lúc 31.05.2005 18:18:07 bởi HongYen >
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HongYen 03.06.2005 11:14:54 (permalink)

Lampuuk was virtually destroyed in the 26 December tsunami


Thursday, 2 June, 2005, 16:25 GMT 17:25 UK

Aceh village still battling for water
By Becky Lipscombe
BBC, Lampuuk, Aceh

Five months after the earthquake and tsunami that devastated large parts of the Indonesian province of Aceh, the village of Lampuuk is still struggling to get back on its feet.

It is still totally reliant on daily deliveries of water, courtesy of local and international NGOs.

Tankers trundle every day along George Bush and Bill Clinton Street, quickly renamed after the visit of the two former US presidents in February.

The vehicles come to a stop near the mosque - the centre of village life now, and the location of the village's three big blue storage tanks.

Pipes from the tanks lead to taps near the shacks and tents that have sprung up nearby.

This water is purely for cooking and drinking purposes. The villagers say they are never sure when the water is coming or who is bringing it, so they use it sparingly.

Huge project


Before the earthquake and tsunami last December there were no such worries - Lampuuk had a plentiful water supply.


The residents of Lampuuk are still dependent on deliveries of water


There were wells in all of the houses, and some also had access to spring water from the mountains.

"Our water was really, really clear," said Ibu Mariani, a schools inspector in Lampuuk.

"We could drink it straight from the well. Even the wells closest to the sea were fresh."

Lampuuk's wells were destroyed in the tsunami. When the houses they stood in were washed away, the wells were filled with sea water, sand and rubble.

Cleaning them is a massive task. "It can take us up to four days to repair one well," said Pak Ayum from the International Committee of the Red Cross.

"And we're trying to repair 500 of them in Lampuuk," he added.

Once the sand and debris is removed, the salt water is pumped out - a process that has to be repeated several times.

Then the well is checked for leaks, and the ring at the top rebuilt.

"Luckily the wells aren't very deep here," said Pak Ayum. "You hit water about three metres below the surface. We just need some more rain to help flush out the salty water from the ground."


Please pray for us, because we don't know when we'll get back to how we were before


Ibu Mariani

There is no shortage of rain at the moment in Lampuuk. There have been massive storms over the past couple of weeks, but it seems still more is needed.

"This water is still really salty," said Ibu Mariani as she scrubbed her clothes on what used to be the concrete floor of someone else's home.

"It makes our skin dry and itchy, and it smells bad. And no matter what detergent you use, the white clothes turn yellow."

'We've gone back to zero'

Ibu Mariani is doing her laundry in a small area next to a well, screened by plastic sheeting but open to the elements.

It doubles as a bathroom for her and her neighbours.

Like so many others, Ibu Mariani's life has been turned upside down in the past five months.

She used to have a washing machine to take care of the laundry, and there were three wells in her big house.

"It's so sad, what's happened here," she said. "It's like we've gone back to zero. Please pray for us, because we don't know when we'll get back to how we were before."

Water will continue to be trucked into Lampuuk for at least a few more months, but the experts agree that the long term prospects for the village are good.

Besides the wells, Lampuuk has access to spring water from the mountains.



The international aid agency Oxfam is currently working on restoring that water supply - redeveloping the source of the springs, then repairing and cleaning the pipes.

"The first phase will be a distribution point into a T45 - a storage facility which can hold 45,000 litres of water," said Ian Clarke, the project manager.

"That will distribute into where people are located currently. But in the longer term, as people's houses are reconstructed, we can work on the second phase, which is bringing the water direct to peoples' homes."

Rebel insurgency

There are political considerations, though, as well as practical ones.

The springs are in the hills just behind the village. It is an area in which the Indonesian government says rebels fighting for an independent Aceh have been active.

So Oxfam has to tread carefully. "It's a complex environment in terms of security," Mr Clarke acknowledged.

"There have been some instances with the separatist movement, though not affecting us or the local community.

"But of course the government is keen to ensure the protection of the people and the NGOs. So this is a negotiation process, but I think it will be resolved quickly."

Oxfam hopes it can finish the first phase of the project within six weeks.

Meanwhile, more wells are being rehabilitated each day.

Slowly but steadily, Lampuuk's water supply is recovering from the damage inflicted upon it by the giant waves last December.


The BBC News website and BBC World Service radio are keeping regular contact with the residents of Lampuuk. Click on the link below for a previous article on the village.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4603755.stm
<bài viết được chỉnh sửa lúc 03.06.2005 11:17:00 bởi HongYen >
HongYen 09.06.2005 14:29:46 (permalink)
Monday, 6 June, 2005, 09:47 GMT 10:47 UK

Bosnia helps trace tsunami dead
By Nick Hawton
BBC News, Sarajevo



The ICMP was set up to identify Bosnian war victims


Forensic experts used to identifying bodies from mass graves in Bosnia are turning their expertise to help the Thai government identify victims of the Asian tsunami.

Renee Kosalka, a forensic anthropologist, is scraping the dirt from a bone found in a mass grave near the town of Zvornik in eastern Bosnia.

"It's difficult to say how many bodies are here," she tells me.

"It's a really difficult grave to deal with. It's been disturbed and it's been used as a rubbish tip after the bodies were dumped. Not only that, but we're close to the underground water level."

Ten years after the Bosnian war, mass graves are still being discovered. The remains are usually some jumbled up clothes and jumbled up bones. There are at least another three mass graves within a few hundred metres of this one.

"At this stage, all we can say is that they're mainly young males aged between 15 and their early 20s," says Renee.

And until a few years ago that is about as far as identification would get, investigators having to rely on relatives perhaps identifying some of the clothing in the graves.

But then the International Commission on Missing Persons (ICMP), set up in the aftermath of the war to try to identify thousands of victims, developed special DNA extraction techniques.

Justice

Their expertise has persuaded the government in Thailand to ask ICMP to try to identify up to 2,000 killed by the devastating tsunami at the end of last year.

Bone samples from the victims have already been flown to special laboratories in Bosnia, where ICMP scientists are applying the same techniques they have used for victims of the Bosnian War.


By identifying victims you provide truth, a form of justice

Doune Porter
ICMP communications director
At ICMP headquarters in Sarajevo, the Canadian head of the DNA programme, John Davoren, shows me the techniques that have helped to identify the victims in mass graves.

The extraction of DNA from bones has been traditionally a very difficult process - especially if carried out on a mass scale.

"The bones are cleaned and bar coded. We then extract the DNA from the samples using special chemicals we have developed," says Mr Davoren.

"Once we have the DNA profile we use special computer software to match the DNA profile with the DNA of the relatives of the victims. The results are extremely accurate. We can identify bone samples with an accuracy of about 99.9999%."

The skills pioneered by ICMP have been used by those investigating the attacks on the World Trade Center in New York and also in attempts to identify up to a million people missing in Iraq.

At this stage, only the Thai government has formally asked ICMP to get involved in tsunami identification. But other countries in the region are thought to be interested in following their lead.

ICMP's principal mandate is to help identify the victims of war and human rights abuses. But they believe their specifically developed skills can help under different circumstances as well.

"By doing this work, by identifying victims you provide truth, a form of justice and that way you can help stabilise a peace process and hopefully bring some type of reconciliation," says Doune Porter, Director of Communications at ICMP.

And by identifying remains, a certain amount of peace is brought to the relatives of the victims, whether killed in a man-made disaster like the Bosnian war or a natural disaster like the tsunami.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4612913.stm
HongYen 09.06.2005 14:32:14 (permalink)
.......


By identifying victims you provide truth, a form of justice


Bosnia helps trace tsunami dead

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4612913.stm
HongYen 17.06.2005 02:37:48 (permalink)
If This Had Been an Actual Tsunami ...

By Jia-Rui Chong and Hector Becerra Times Staff Writers
1 hour, 31 minutes ago

California's first tsunami warning in more than a decade triggered an uneven response in coastal communities up and down the state, with some agencies rushing to evacuate beaches and others deciding not to warn the public at all.

On Wednesday, as officials assessed the way they had handled the emergency, there was general agreement that much more needed to be done.

"I don't think all the agencies got an A-plus on their response," said Los Angeles Councilwoman Janice Hahn, who has asked for a report on how emergency teams handled the tsunami warning. "We're lucky we just had a trial run."

The tsunami alert, issued by the National Weather Service after a 7.2 magnitude quake struck off the coast of Northern California on Tuesday night, trickled down to local emergency officials in inconsistent ways.

Many received teletype messages from the state, but in some cases local authorities got the notices just as the wave was projected to hit. Some officials said they learned about the alert by watching television or receiving calls from panicked residents who had heard about the alert on TV.

The warning, the highest possible alert from the federal government, prompted confusion at some police departments. In Santa Monica, officials thought it was "just informational, only a bulletin," said Police Sgt. Jeff Wiles. Assuming that they would receive an update if the situation became more serious, city officials decided not to open their emergency operations center.

In Huntington Beach, the police watch commander on duty had trouble interpreting the bulletins and wasn't sure whether a tsunami warning was actually in effect. "They were confusing to read through," said Lt. Craig Junginger. "It talks about wind variables and knots and waves."

The warning stated that communities along the Pacific Ocean from British Columbia to the Mexican border should brace for a possible tsunami and that people along the beach should move to higher ground. The message gave approximate times over several hours at which a tsunami, if triggered by the quake, would strike various spots along the California coast. The state subsequently sent out its own warnings.

But the warning system leaves it up to local agencies to decide what to do next. And there was a great range of responses.

In places such as San Diego, Newport Beach and Seal Beach, lifeguards and police officers raced to beaches to clear people off the sand. But they allowed people in homes and businesses along the beach to remain.

In many other cities, including Half Moon Bay — south of San Francisco — and Long Beach, officials decided to monitor the situation and not take any action at the beaches.

Lon Waxstein, commander in the Half Moon Bay Police Department, said he didn't think there was reason for panic.

"People need to get a grip," he said. "They are getting way, way worried on something that has only happened once in recent history to the whole continental United States. But we have floods, we have wildfires, we have plane crashes — those happen more than a tsunami."

The warnings originated from the West Coast and Alaska Tsunami Warning Center, a National Weather Service office in Palmer, Alaska.

Immediately after sensors in the Pacific Ocean picked up the quake at 7:51 p.m., the center's "seismic processing software" determined that the shaking exceeded 3.0 on the Richter scale and paged the scientists at the center, said Laura Furgione, regional director for the weather service in Alaska.

The message told the scientists that there was an earthquake 90 miles off Eureka and the preliminary magnitude was 7.4.

Scientists sent out an alert at 7:56 p.m.

The message appeared immediately on national weather websites, was wired to media outlets, went by satellite to emergency managers' computers and was broadcast by speaker phone on a network developed for homeland security.

Policy dictates a warning if the underwater earthquake is 7.0 or stronger, a threshold based on historical tsunami data, Furgione said.

There was no time to debate whether a warning was necessary, she said, because the center's projections showed that a wave could hit Crescent City within 40 minutes of the temblor and reach San Francisco about 50 minutes later.

"We don't have time not to issue the warning," she said. "It's better to get the information out to the public and to the emergency managers so they can put an evacuation mechanism in place," she said.

The 24-hour warning center at California's Office of Emergency Services received the message on its computer at 7:57 p.m., said spokesman Eric Lamoureux.

Staff members posted the notice on their website and forwarded a teletype message to local agencies on the Law Enforcement Telecommunication System. An automated phone message went out to all California coastal counties. Staff members then called each of those counties to confirm that they had received the message.

Lamoureux said all of this took approximately 7 minutes.

The public first learned about the alert a few minutes later, when several broadcasters flashed alerts. Cable provider Comcast broke into all programming to issue a warning about a possible tsunami. But the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department chose not to send a local bulletin to broadcasters after concluding that the threat was not great enough, said Sgt. Britta Tubbs of the emergency operations bureau.

Despite the warnings, local officials said they would have been hard pressed to launch an effective evacuation had a tsunami formed.

Arcata, a small city at the north end of Humboldt Bay, received a tsunami warning at 8:03 p.m. Officials saw that the tsunami was projected to hit Crescent City in the next 30 minutes and assumed the wave could crash into their community minutes later.

"Had the tsunami been generated last night, we would not have had enough time to generate evacuation for that local event," said Tom Chapman, a captain at the Arcata Police Department. "While the system really helps us, time constraints, which the system has no control over, really can play a factor in the response we can generate."

As soon as Seal Beach police officers saw the warning, they began putting together a reverse 911 phone tree that would have sent a recorded message to more than 800 homes in the flood-prone areas. The message would have advised residents in low-lying areas to head for higher ground.

But it takes about an hour for the message to be recorded, input into the computer and sent out — so it's unclear whether the phone alerts would have been completed in time.

"We had started to put it together, but then the warning was canceled," said Sgt. Rick Ransdell with the Seal Beach Police Department.

Fort Bragg officials said emergency workers struggled with a deluge of calls from concerned residents after hearing reports on the radio and television or from patrol cars that broadcast the warning from their public address systems.

As residents heard about the tsunami news, many called 911 to ask for advice on what to do. The lines became so jammed that Mendocino County officials called a local radio station to tell people to stop calling 911, said Lt. Floyd Higdon of the Fort Bragg Police Department.

After last December's tsunami off the coast of Sumatra that killed more than 175,000 people, "everyone has taken this as a serious issue," Higdon said.

By about 8:23 p.m., officials at the tsunami center in Alaska were getting the first indications that the quake might not produce a tsunami. A shoreline gauge at Humboldt Bay near Eureka reported that the water level had not changed.

About 20 minutes later, a deep ocean buoy near the epicenter picked up a 1-centimeter wave. This reaffirmed to scientists that a major tsunami would not occur.

It took 58 minutes to confirm there was no tsunami, Furgione said. Then, at 9:09 p.m., the federal warning center sent out a message canceling the alert.

Federal and state officials said they were satisfied with their efforts to spread the word. Lamoureux, the state official, said that some state emergency officials outside of the warning center had trouble reaching some of the local agencies.

Some of them had to wait for several minutes because the lines were busy with calls from residents.

But local officials acknowledge they have much work to do.

Larry Collins, the Los Angeles County Fire Department captain on the county's tsunami task force, said officials want to install street signs in coastal areas detailing evacuation routes and install air raid sirens that would warn of a massive wave. They are also telling beachside residents to take their own steps to guard their safety, such as buying special radios that broadcast national weather alerts.

"We don't have a consistent plan statewide or even countywide," Collins said.

"Right now, some places evacuate and others don't. Each city makes their own rules, and there's no governing body that says, 'You will operate consistently like this,' " he added. "The best warning for people in vulnerable coastal areas is that if they feel a strong shaking, they need to evacuate now, without any warning."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/latimests/20050616/ts_latimes/ifthishadbeenanactualtsunami
HongYen 21.06.2005 14:40:26 (permalink)
Tourism's slow recovery along Indian Ocean's tsunami-hit beaches

Click: Thailand's southern Phuket pier

AFP - Sun Jun 19, 4:33 PM ET A view of Thailand's southern Phuket pier with anchored speedboats at dawn. Although tourism officials in India, Sri Lanka, and the Maldives are cautiously optimistic about their nation's tourism fortunes, visitors remain reluctant to visit Thailand's beaches, where half the tsunami victims are believed to be foreign holidaymakers.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20050619/lf_afp/asiaquake6months
<bài viết được chỉnh sửa lúc 21.06.2005 14:41:37 bởi HongYen >
HongYen 25.06.2005 14:31:02 (permalink)
An equation -> E=mc²

E = Energy
m = mass
c2 = times c squared

.......
This is Einstein's famous equation: e, energy equals m, mass, times c squared, the speed of light squared. In metres per second eight nine thousand, eight hundred and seventy five million million, huge number. That means you get an awful lot of energy for an extremely tiny amount of mass.
.......

http://www.bbc.co.uk/sn/tvradio/programmes/horizon/einstein_equation_trans.shtml

HongYen 25.06.2005 14:37:18 (permalink)
Thursday, 23 June, 2005, 15:10 GMT 16:10 UK

Aceh village still split by tsunami

By Becky Lipscombe
BBC, Lampuuk, Aceh


Most of Lampuuk's villagers are still in temporary homes


The village of Lampuuk on the west coast of Aceh was completely destroyed by last year's Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, and only 1,000 people survived from a population of 6,000.

Lampuuk's mosque was the only building left standing.

But it still bears the scars.

Supporting pillars lean at uncomfortable angles, chunks of masonry dangle precariously from twisted metal struts in the roof.

And beneath the wreckage, a small group of wedding guests recently picked their way through the puddles to listen to a bride and groom make their vows.

Hamdan and Mejara, the newly-weds, are both from Lampuuk.

But like most of the village's survivors, they have not yet moved back.



Holding the wedding in Lampuuk is a sign of intent though. As soon as they are able, they plan to return to join the 250 survivors already there, living in tents and shacks made from salvaged wood.



"I'm building a wooden house for us here in Lampuuk," said Hamdan, the groom. "As soon as it's finished, we'll move back. This is our home."

Until the house is ready, though, Mejara will continue to live with relatives in the provincial capital of Banda Aceh. Hamdan will return to where many of Lampuuk's survivors are now living - in government-built "barracks" in the nearby village of Lam Lhom.

Noisy and crowded

The barracks are home to about 300 of Lampuuk's survivors, living in cramped conditions in wooden long-houses.

Children play in the narrow allies between the barracks as chickens scurry out of their way. Women sit and chop vegetables on the wooden walkways outside their rooms, men smoke clove cigarettes whilst mending fishing nets, and washing hangs from every available space.

"It's noisy and crowded," said Jamalia, a widow. "But I like that. It's better than living in a tent in Lampuuk. It's so quiet now in Lampuuk, there's only the sound of the wind and the rain."


Jamalia's husband died in the tsunami


Jamalia shares a small room with nine people - another woman who lost her husband in the tsunami, and eight young boys and teenagers who lost their parents.

"Many of the children are still traumatised," Jamalia said.

"It's better that they're here now, with all of us. But as soon as we get proper houses in Lampuuk, of course we'll go back."

Jamalia's friend Riswati, another widow, agreed.

"If they asked us to go back now we'd say no, because there's nothing there. But once there are houses, we'll go home."

Riswati stayed with relatives immediately after the tsunami, but as soon as the barracks were built she moved there to be with her friends.

"It's better to be with people who know what you've been through," she said.

"Other people from Lampuuk, they're the only people who can understand."

Desert

For the survivors in the barracks, Lampuuk is still home, but it is a difficult place to be right now.

Aceh's "west wind" season is in full swing, with torrential downpours and strong winds most days.


Many children are still traumatised


It is a bleak landscape far removed from its former self - the haven of lush vegetation where city dwellers used to visit to eat barbecued fish on the beach.

"There are no trees any more, it's like living in a desert," said Sufriadi, a carpenter.

It is not just the trees that are missing in Lampuuk. There are very few facilities, water still has to be trucked in, transport is difficult, and the nearest health centre is in Lam Lhom, close to the barracks.

"We tried to work in Lampuuk," said Christina Thevenot, from international aid organisation Medicins du Monde, "but the fact is there aren't that many people there, that's why we're in Lam Lhom."

Even if more of Lampuuk's survivors do return, it is not clear what medical facilities there will be in the future.

"We have to follow the authorities, and they have decided that for the moment there will be no health centre in Lampuuk," Ms Thevenot said.

Lampuuk's survivors are split. Those that have already returned are staking their claim to their village, hoping others will follow. Those in the barracks are united in their desire to return, but not before conditions are better.

One day, they are sure, they will all live together again. But quite when, no-one knows.

"If there were houses ready today, we'd go back today", says Jamalia. "If next month, we'll go back then. We don't know when. But Lampuuk is our village, so that's where we'll be."

The BBC News website and BBC World Service radio are keeping regular contact with the residents of Lampuuk. Click on the links below for previous articles on the village.

Acehnese villagers struggle on
Aceh village still battling for water

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/4123678.stm
HongYen 25.06.2005 14:41:43 (permalink)
Friday, 24 June, 2005, 11:25 GMT 12:25 UK

Sri Lanka tsunami aid deal signed


Police fire tear gas to disperse supporters of the nationalist JVP


The Sri Lankan government and Tamil Tiger rebels have signed a controversial tsunami aid-sharing deal.
It comes after weeks of protests by a powerful nationalist party and the influential Buddhist clergy, who say it threatens Sri Lanka's sovereignty.

The plan is meant to ensure an equal distribution of aid to all parts of the country hit by December's tsunami, including rebel-held areas.

Tens of thousands of Sri Lankans are yet to receive tsunami aid.

Down with the Tiger mechanism. Tear up the Joint Mechanism

Protest banners

Controversy over deal
Muslim anger at deal
Indentification to last

"The government signed the memorandum of understanding," said leader of the house, Maithripala Sirisena, shortly after protests had forced a parliamentary debate to be abandoned.

Norwegian peace brokers then took the document to the northern rebel-held town of Kilinochchi where the Tamil Tigers signed it, bringing the agreement into force.

The Tsunami Joint Mechanism paves the way for the government and the Tamil rebels to share nearly $3bn in foreign aid, and ministers say it could boost stalled peace efforts.

But the BBC's Dumeetha Luthra in Colombo says it has caused internal dissent and split the government.

Angry protests

Ahead of the parliamentary debate, police fired tear gas to prevent hundreds of supporters of the nationalist People's Liberation Front (JVP) from marching on parliament.


Tens of thousands of tsunami-victims are still to get aid


"Down with the Tiger mechanism. Tear up the Joint Mechanism," read banners held up by the protesters.

Inside parliament, JVP MPs prevented a debate on the issue.

A police spokeswoman told the Associated Press news agency that security had been stepped up, especially in Colombo.

"We have got the assistance of the army," Rienzie Perera said.

The joint mechanism, which was made public for the first time on Friday, has a three-member panel with representatives from the government, the Tamil Tigers and the Muslim community.

Donors had pressed for the joint mechanism so that they could avoid channelling funds directly to the Tigers, as many countries list the rebel group as terrorist.

Strong opposition

President Chandrika Kumaratunga has strongly backed the aid deal, saying it could help jump-start peace talks with the rebels which stalled two years ago.

But it is bitterly opposed by the JVP which pulled out of Sri Lanka's ruling coalition last week in protest.

It argued that allowing the rebels to participate in the distribution of aid would help them to establish a Tamil state.

The party's withdrawal means Mrs Kumaratunga now leads a minority government, and in the past week she has been trying to build new alliances.

Despite Muslim representation in the mechanism panel, the minority community is unhappy at not being made a full signatory.

Nearly 31,000 people died in Sri Lanka when the tsunami struck on 26 December. Half a million were made homeless.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/4617917.stm
HongYen 25.06.2005 14:47:50 (permalink)
Friday, 24 June, 2005, 12:02 GMT 13:02 UK

E-mail this to a friend Printable version

Sri Lanka's controversial tsunami deal


By Dumeetha Luthra
BBC correspondent, Colombo




The money is to be used in areas under rebel and government control


So finally, nearly six months after the Indian Ocean tsunami devastated much of Sri Lanka, the government and the powerful Tamil Tiger rebel movement have agreed on how to disburse $3bn of promised international aid.

The deal was originally put forward in the immediate aftermath of the disaster. It was seen then as a plan to unite the country in the face of tragedy.

The idea was to set up a mechanism that guaranteed that the aid would reach areas under both government and Tamil Tiger control.

But the proposal, rather than unifying, has proven to be divisive and hugely controversial.

Hardline opposition

Initially, wrangling between President Chandrika Kumaratunga's government and the Tamil Tigers served to underline the legacy of mistrust from 20 years of civil war.

When a deal was finally hammered out, it appeared that it would be scuppered from within the president's own government.

Her main ally, the hardline nationalist People's Liberation Front (JVP) remained vehemently opposed to it.


President Kumaratunga has worked for a consensus


It argued that such a deal would legitimise the rebels and undermine Sri Lanka's sovereignty.

Last week the party withdrew its 39 members from the coalition leaving President Kumaratunga with a fragile minority government and a real possibility of elections in the next few months.

The JVP also mobilised thousands of people on to the streets in protest, as did the influential Buddhist clergy which is equally opposed to the Tigers.

The anger escalated into clashes, with saffron robed monks trying to storm President Chandrika Kumaratunga's residence, with police using tear gas and water cannon to disperse the crowds.

Under pressure

The president has been in a difficult position.

Having tied herself so firmly to the aid deal, and under international pressure to push ahead, she has been working to cobble together some sort of consensus.

Friday's debate in parliament had been expected to provide her with a broad swathe of cross party support for the deal, even though it does not need to be ratified by parliament.

Instead JVP members stormed in with black flags - signifying this as a day of mourning - and outside police fired tear gas on JVP supporters and Buddhist monks.

The chaos resulted in the debate being postponed.

Hopes of stability

The signing of the aid deal comes as a huge relief for the international community.

Many are hoping that the deal can now put the country and the peace process back together


It now provides a way of allocating long term co-ordinated relief to victims of the tsunami in the rebel-held areas.

Many donors have the Tamil Tiger rebels on their international terrorist lists and would not fund them directly.

The deal is also seen as a way of creating stability on the island.

The east has been increasingly volatile since the defection of a top Tamil Tiger commander last year, with factional fighting and political killings.

There has been a real fear that a failure to provide substantial assistance to tsunami victims in that area could lead to further unrest.

Peace monitors say the three year old ceasefire is already stretched.

Crucially both the president and the rebels have signalled that the deal could open the door to restarting the deadlocked peace process.

Talks between the government and Tamil Tiger rebels have been stalled for two years.

It has been a long time coming, but many of Sri Lanka's future hopes rest on this deal working.

Last December Sri Lanka suffered a huge disaster.

Many are hoping that the deal can now put the country and the peace process back together.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/4619167.stm
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