Asian Tsunami Disaster

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Aceh's Tsunami Survivors - 15.02.2005 17:22:15
For Aceh's Tsunami Survivors, a Step Toward Normalcy
By Nancy-Amelia Collins
Jakarta
14 February 2005



Children carrying food aid in Aceh - File photo



The first of more than 400,000 refugees from Indonesia's tsunami-devastated Aceh province are moving into temporary wooden barracks, in a small but important step on the region's slow road to recovery.

A group of more than 400 refugees will move Tuesday from their tent shelters in the Acehnese capital of Banda Aceh to temporary wooden barracks, in what the government says is the first stage of the relocation process.

A director of the public works department, Totok Pri, says, by mid-March, the government will have built a total of 803 temporary shelters, which will be able to house up to 9730 families.

The earthquake and tsunami that struck on December 26 left a quarter of a million people in Aceh dead or missing. Entire villages, roads and bridges were destroyed. Another half a million refugees, survivors of the disaster, are currently dispersed across the province.

The United Nations public information officer in Banda Aceh, Hiro Ueki, says relocation to the new housing is temporary, and must be done on a voluntary basis.

"Nobody should be forced to relocate to those centers. As long as displaced people are willing to move to relocation centers, that's fine with us, but, basically, we would prefer that those people go back to their previous homes and start to rebuild their lives there again," Mr. Ueki says.

But Mr. Ueki says those who want to return home may not have that option for some time.

"But still a large number of people are not in the position to do so, given the fact that removal of the rubble continues, in some cases, entire towns or villages have been destroyed," Mr. Ueki says. "… So, it will take some time for many of them to be able to go back and start rebuilding their lives."

Despite the bitter memories awaiting them, many Acehnese have expressed a deep desire to return to their original villages.

But the government says those who wish to build new homes must do so in approved areas. It is considering turning the destroyed coastal areas into buffer zones for protection against any future tsunami.

Officials say the temporary camps are being built to internationally accepted standards for sanitation and other essentials, and will be run by the refugees themselves.

http://www.voanews.com/english/2005-02-14-voa25.cfm

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Tsunami Child 'Baby 81,' Parents Reunited - 17.02.2005 03:14:01


Jenita Jeyarajah, right, and Murugupillai Jeyarajah, second right, with their son Abilass Jeyarajah or 'Baby 81', pray at a Hindu temple, at Kalmunai, Sri Lanka, Wednesday Feb. 16, 2005. The four-month-old boy, separated from his parents by the devastating tsunami tidal waves, was returned to his parents on Wednesday after an agonizing custody battle of nearly eight weeks that involved DNA testing of several claimants. (AP Photo/Eranga Jayawardena)

Wed Feb 16, 9:01 AM ET


Tsunami Child 'Baby 81,' Parents Reunited

1 hour, 28 minutes ago World - AP Asia

By KRISHAN FRANCIS, Associated Press Writer

KALMUNAI, Sri Lanka - "Baby 81," the infant claimed by nine couples after he miraculously survived the tsunami, was reunited with his parents Wednesday in the joyous conclusion to an agonizing custody battle that captured hearts around the world.




Tsunami Child 'Baby 81,' Parents Reunited
AP - 1 hour, 28 minutes ago

Smiling with relief, Jenita Jeyarajah took the baby, dressed in blue, from a doctor's arms in a courtroom packed with onlookers after the judge said DNA tests confirmed the baby is her 4-month-old son Abilass.

"Look how happy he is! He knows the scent of his parents!" gushed the father, Murugupillai Jeyarajah. "After returning to us, he still hasn't cried."

The couple went straight from the court to a Hindu temple to give thanks for their son's return and smash a coconut in ritual fulfillment of a vow. Relatives joined them, chanting prayers and raising their hands in worship as the father carried the child around the shrine.

It was just the first of many temples the couple planned to visit Wednesday.

.........

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&u=/ap/20050216/ap_on_re_as/tsunami_baby81


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Tsunami-Ravaged Areas - 20.02.2005 06:15:58
Yahoo! News 9:02am Sat, Feb 19, 2005

Bush, Clinton Tour Tsunami-Ravaged Areas

(Ravage /'ravidz/ v. do great damage to, n. violently destructicve effect)



Bush, Clinton Tour Tsunami-Ravaged Areas

2 hours, 2 minutes ago World - AP Asia

By CHRISTOPHER TORCHIA, Associated Press Writer

BAN NAM KHEM, Thailand - School children waving American flags welcomed former presidents Bush and Clinton to their dusty fishing village devastated by the Dec. 26 tsunami, as the two toured the region Saturday.


AP Photo



George H.W. Bush and Clinton stood in intense tropical heat as children who lost family members in the tsunami presented them with drawings, one showing a giant wave and a rescue helicopter and the other of floodwaters sweeping away people, cars and boats. The former presidents later visited a memorial wall honoring foreign tourists who died, and they then dined with Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra.

The two former presidents were asked by current President George W. Bush (news - web sites) to lead the U.S. effort to provide private aid to hundreds of thousands of tsunami victims. They also plan to visit Indonesia, Sri Lanka and the Maldives.

"I don't think there's ever been a tragedy that affected the heartbeat of the American people as much as this tsunami has done," the senior Bush said in the shattered village of Ban Nam Khem. "I don't think you can put a limit on it. It's so devastating. They're still finding wreckage, still actually some bodies being recovered."

After arriving on the Thai resort island of Phuket on Saturday, the two men made their way by U.S. military helicopter and then motorcade to Ban Nam Khem.

A crowd of several hundred villagers greeted them from behind barriers, and a group of Thai school children in red caps and white shirts waved paper American flags.

One banner in the crowd read: "Bill, let's talk please."

The former political adversaries said their old differences were irrelevant to the task at hand.

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&u=/ap/20050219/ap_on_re_as/tsunami

..........................


Latest Headlines:
· Former US presidents Bush, Clinton visit Thailand seeking more tsunami aid
AFP - 12 minutes ago

· Clinton, Bush Close to Tears in Tsunami Aid Tour
Reuters - 1 hour, 52 minutes ago

· Bush, Clinton Tour Tsunami-Ravaged Areas
AP - 2 hours, 2 minutes ago


Special Coverage
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Tsunami couple's last moments - 25.02.2005 04:20:23


Thursday, 24 February, 2005, 06:39 GMT

In pictures: Tsunami couple's last moments

1 of 6
John and Jackie Knill pose for a photo during their holiday in Thailand. The last series of photos on their digital camera, taken on 26 December tells the story of their fate.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_pictures/4293123.stm

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RE: Tsunami couple's last moments - 25.02.2005 04:23:35


Thursday, 24 February, 2005, 00:30 GMT

E-mail this to a friend Printable version

Tsunami devastates turtle conservation

By Subir Bhaumik
BBC News, Calcutta



Turtles washed inland by the waves have been returned to the sea
December's tsunami devastated efforts to save Indian Ocean turtles, with scores of conservation field staff killed or missing.

The Indian Ocean and South East Asian Marine Turtle Memorandum of Understanding brings together nations in the area to preserve the endangered marine reptiles and says it is shocked by the effects of the killer waves.

......................

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/4290643.stm

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RE: Tsunami couple's last moments - 25.02.2005 04:26:53
Thursday, 24 February, 2005, 15:13 GMT

Aceh children still looking for family By Kate McGeown , BBC News


After weeks of searching, Putri has been reunited with her family

Amirudin Mulyanis cannot help smiling when he talks about his 12-year-old daughter Putri.
On the day the tsunami hit the Indonesian province of Aceh, Mr Mulyanis and his family ran from the approaching wall of water.

But Putri became separated from the others.

"I tried to look for them but I was so tired," Putri said.

"Then a man came to me and said he would look after me, so I stayed with him - but I really, really wanted to find my family."

........................

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4287859.stm


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RE: Tsunami couple's last moments - 27.02.2005 08:19:20

Thousands of children have lost both their families and homes


Saturday, 26 February, 2005, 12:35 GMT

Struggle continues for Aceh's orphans

It is exactly two months since tidal waves smashed into the shores of Indonesia's Aceh province killing some 230,000 people. Tens of thousands are still living in temporary shelters although the authorities are gradually moving people into sturdier accommodation.

It is still dark inside the tent when Marwadah wakes up.

Two elderly women are snoring and an army truck roars past on the road just outside. It is half past six in the morning.

Marwadah is 11 years old. She is bleary eyed but already smiling as she slips out of the tent in her new school uniform and a white headscarf, which frames her scarred face like a picture.

Breakfast does not really happen in the camp, so she sets off on foot, past the French aid workers' tent, and along the road to school.

I first met Marwadah just a few days after the tsunami. I was with a group of Indonesian officials trying to work out roughly how many children had been orphaned by the waves.

Marwadah had hung back, reluctant to join a queue of giggling kids lining up to answer the men's questions.

Finding a sister

She was, as far as she knew, the only survivor in her family.

The wave had dumped her about a mile from her home. In the camp she had found a neighbour, a large lady with a familiar face. Marwadah stuck to her like glue.

Today, the neighbour has moved somewhere else.

But Marwadah skips out of her classroom at noon with a huge grin. She pinches my arm.

"White," she says, staring in fascination at the contrast with her dark skin.

We walk back along the road in the heat to the tent. And there, sitting outside under a clove tree is the source of her happiness. Her 16-year-old sister, Mutiyah.

They look alike, but Mutiyah is the quiet one, sitting back with a smile to let her younger sibling finish her sentences and boss her around.

Mutiyah's face has the same small scars on it from the wave.

They had been together in the house on 26 December, but it was nearly a month before they found each other again.

This afternoon, the girls are planning to visit their new camp. It is about 10 minutes walk along the main road.

New home

The Indonesian government has built half a dozen large wooden huts on stilts. Everyone calls them barracks.

Marwadah pushes her sister aside impatiently and opens the padlock. Inside the room, it is baking hot and immaculate, the girls' new possessions lined up carefully in a corner.

About 80 people lived in Lampaya before the tsunami, 12 survived.

They have been given a stove, some plates, a bucket and bedding.

The authorities have asked the girls to move into the barracks, but they are not keen.

There is no running water yet and they are concerned about sleeping here alone with an army camp just up the road.

Marwadah has another worry.

Twenty yards from their room is a mass grave, maybe 400 bodies beneath a patch of muddy ground.

"I am scared of ghosts," she says.

It is estimated Aceh will need $4bn (£2.1bn) over the next five years

Her sister tells her not to worry, that the ghosts are all friends and neighbours.

The ruins of their village are just across the road. About 80 people lived in Lampaya before the tsunami, 12 survived.

Marwadah skips through the rubble, happily pointing out where their home was, and dragging a pair of jeans out of the mud.

Mutiyah, older and aware of her responsibilities, starts sobbing.

She says there was a family feud in the past. The house belonged to their grandmother, but now a distant uncle has convinced local officials that the land it stood on is his, leaving the girls with nothing.

And there are other worries too.

Marwadah was given a $100 note by a foreigner soon after the tsunami. Someone in the camp offered to exchange it for local currency. He kept the note, but then told the girls that, since it was printed in 1996, it was now out of date and worthless.

We went to see him together. I offered to exchange the bill for a more recent one and he quickly changed his story.

But now Mutiyah is worried about where to keep the cash.

Future

Like everyone else she lost all her documents in the wave, so she cannot open a bank account yet.

Marwadah folds her arms and announces that she will never trust anyone ever again

There is a group of men who sit quietly by the camp entrance listening closely as I walk in and out with the girls. One hundred dollars is a lot of money here.

Marwadah folds her arms and announces that she will never trust anyone ever again.

By six o'clock, the sun is already hidden behind the palm trees.

Mutiyah tells her sister to help sweep the tent and roll out their single mattress. Marwadah giggles and runs off.

In a minute it will be time for evening prayers, and then bed.

Neither sister has any idea what they will do in the future.

Marwadah's teacher says she is the brightest in her class. Mutiyah has no money for college, but she is not keen on studying anyway.

For now, they will keep going as they are, in a way they are still treading water.

From Our Own Correspondent was broadcast on Saturday, 26 February, 2005, at 1130 GMT on BBC Radio 4. Please check the programme schedules for World Service transmission times.


By Andrew Harding
BBC News, Banda Aceh, Indonesia


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/4297629.stm

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RE: Tsunami couple's last moments - 08.03.2005 04:26:30
South Asia Tsunami Reconstruction to Cost Billions

By Anjana Pasricha
New Delhi
06 March 2005

The first hard figures are coming in on the cost of rebuilding areas of South Asian hit by the December 26 tsunami.

The World Bank estimates that Sri Lanka will need one and a half billion dollars to rebuild housing and the transportation system, and the local fishing and tourism industries.

Sri Lanka suffered the most extensive damage after Indonesia in the disaster. The total losses are estimated to equal 4.4 percent of the country's gross domestic product.

In a recent report, the World Bank estimates that losses in the Maldives have reached nearly half a billion dollars, adding up to a staggering two-thirds of the archipelago's annual domestic economic output. The housing and tourism sectors are the worst hit, with tourist arrivals dropping by as much as 80 percent.

International aid institutions made the estimates based on their evaluations of the damage in the region.

India says it will finance most of its tsunami reconstruction work on its own, although it may seek help later from international aid institutions.

Indian Finance Minister P. Chidambaram recently told Parliament the government is providing $2 billion to rebuild tsunami-hit areas on the southeast coast and to restore the livelihoods of people affected by the waves. "I wish to assure the house [of Parliament] and the affected people that the government will provide the necessary funds for the purpose and ensure that every affected family is fully rehabilitated," he said.

Rebuilding efforts in the tsunami-hit countries focus on replacing the fishing boats and nets that were swept away by the giant waves.

The United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization says losses in the fishing industry total half a billion dollars - much of it damaged or lost boats. It says the first priority is to repair boats wherever possible. Teams are already working in Sri Lanka and elsewhere to help fishermen return to sea.

The World Bank says countries have moved quickly into the rebuilding phase due to the generous international aid for people affected by the tsunami. But the bank's report says most of the money so far pledged is for humanitarian relief, and more aid will be needed over the next three to five years to restore the damage wrought by the waves.

http://www.voanews.com/english/2005-03-06-voa7.cfm

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Victims Sue Thailand, U.S., Accor Over Tsunami - 08.03.2005 15:55:32


Victims Sue Thailand, U.S., Accor Over Tsunami

Mon Mar 7, 9:20 AM ET World - Reuters

VIENNA (Reuters) - U.S. and Austrian lawyers have filed a lawsuit demanding Thailand, U.S. forecasters and the French Accor group answer accusations they failed in a duty to warn populations hit by December's Tsunami disaster, a lawyer said Monday.


The lawsuit was filed Friday at a New York district court on behalf of tsunami victims by lawyers including U.S. attorney Edward Fagan, internationally renowned for 1990s lawsuits against Swiss banks over Holocaust-era accounts. It demanded an account of their actions on Dec. 26.


"We expect a hearing within 30 days," Austrian lawyer Gerhard Podovsovnik told Reuters.


"We don't earn any money on the lawsuit. We want to help people," he said. "We are suing to get information."


The disaster left about 300,000 people dead or missing in Indonesia, Sri Lanka, India, Thailand, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Maldives, Bangladesh and East Africa. Hundreds of thousands lost their homes.


The text of the lawsuit is available on the Web site www.tsunamivictimsgroup.com.


The U.S. and Austrian lawyers filed the lawsuit on behalf of around 60 named plaintiffs from Austria, Germany, France, Netherlands and elsewhere. Podovsovnik said they were also acting on behalf of at least 40 more not named.


The lawsuit suggests the Thai government and the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), which operates a Tsunami Warning Center in Hawaii, failed to issue the requisite warnings.


SLOW WARNINGS


"Respondent NOAA did not notify all involved countries which lay in the tsunami's path. From public information it appears that ... NOAA failed to issue an alert that would notify countries where the tsunami hit that the deadly wave was coming," the lawsuit said.


"Published reports emerged that upon receipt of the NOAA alert and other data, the seismological and oceanographic experts of Thailand spent more than one hour talking about what the risk may or may not have been, instead of immediately issuing a warning to their population," it said.


It also accused Thailand of failing to notify Sri Lanka that a tsunami wave was headed its way.


Among the charges leveled against Accor, the owner of the Sofitel hotel chain, was failure to equip its luxury resort and spa in Khao Lak, Thailand with state-of-the-art seismic detection and warning systems, despite its location "in an earthquake and tsunami fault zone."

Last month, Accor issued a statement denying media reports of possible negligence in connection with the tsunami disaster. "The allegations concerning Accor are completely unfounded," Accor said on its Web Site.

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nm/20050307/wl_nm/tsunami_lawsuit_dc



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RE: Victims Sue Thailand, U.S., Accor Over Tsunami - 09.03.2005 11:17:46
Tuesday, 1 March, 2005, 00:23 GMT

Boonhome's basket will be put up for sale on eBay


Thais find new ways to survive
By Chris Hogg
BBC News, Thailand

Boonhome Meekuson used to work as a chambermaid to support her two teenage sons.
To make ends meet she also sold food to passers-by from a noodle cart on the side of the road.

That was before the tsunami came.

Now she and her boys live in a camp for those displaced by the giant waves that hit the strip of the Thai coast where she lived and worked.

They have been there for two months now.

When I met her though, Boonhome Meekuson was happier than she had been in weeks.

She was sitting on the floor weaving strips of brightly coloured plastic into a basket.

She hopes to sell the finished product to a tourist.

"I am very happy," she said, "because although we've lost everything, the government is trying to help us find new careers."

Few tourists

The problem, of course, is that the tourists are yet to come back in any substantial numbers to this part of Thailand.

The coastline around Khao Lak in Phang Nga province was badly hit and work is yet to begin on rebuilding several of the hotels destroyed there.

But Boonhome is taking part in a new project which aims to use the internet to put people like her in touch with potential customers worldwide.

When her basket is finished, a volunteer takes a photograph of her holding it and posts it on the auction website eBay, along with a few lines of biographical information about her.

"We can make some money out of this," she said. "It's better than relying on people's donations. We can try to stand on our own feet again."

The baskets are selling for several times more than they might if they were sold by more traditional methods - by hawkers on the beach, for instance.

"These are simple products but there are over 100 million buyers on eBay who want to help in some way," Robert Holme, one of the American volunteers helping to run the project, said.

"It supports them growing their own skills, so they can create a future for themselves."

"It sounds simple, but it's proving surprisingly effective," said Anne Mathuros Bhucharoen, who is helping to run the project.

She worked as a guest services manager at the Bangsak Beach Resort before most of it was washed away.

"We are still waiting to know what the government plans to do to help us to rebuild the hotels here. In the meantime, we needed something to provide some income for the people who used to work in the resorts," she said.

Therapy
Projects like this do not just have a financial benefit, the abbot of the local temple Phra Kru Suwatthi Thrammarat, said. They are therapeutic too.

He is caring for a group of sea-gypsies who are too afraid to return to their former life, fearing there will be a second tsunami.

With his encouragement they have begun building small boats which they too hope to sell to foreigners who come to the temple.

"They want to stand by themselves, but now the problem is how to stand by themselves," the abbot said.

"They are fishermen. They can make a boat, but they can't go fishing. If they make a toy boat and maybe sell it to those well-wishers who come to visit us, they won't feel like they're relying on charity," he said.

The projects are both small scale, but for many people in this part of Thailand they are all they have got.

"We do not expect the tourists will come back in any substantial numbers before the start of the high season next November," government official Satchapon Thongsom said.

There are a few though.

A little further down the beach, in the resort of Kamala, Swedish tourist Henrik Mellquist relaxed with his family, trying to ignore the smoke from a bonfire lit on the sand to try to burn off some of the debris collected that morning.

He said that taking this holiday was a way of doing his bit for the recovery effort.

"One man told me 'We survived the tsunami, but we won't survive the next few months if the tourists don't return.'

"It's a tragic to see how people here have to struggle to get back to their normal life. Otherwise for tourists, everything is fine," he said.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/4305325.stm

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Tough decisions on tsunami orphans Tsunami - 09.03.2005 11:26:42
Thursday, 3 March, 2005, 00:48 GMT


Children are encouraged to play to divert them from the trauma


Tough decisions on tsunami orphans
By Sunil Raman
BBC News, Tamil Nadu

Last Updated: Thursday, 3 March, 2005, 00:48 GMT

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Tough decisions on tsunami orphans

By Sunil Raman
BBC News, Tamil Nadu

Children are encouraged to play to divert them from the trauma

Around 200 children were orphaned and many more lost one parent when December's tsunami struck the district of Nagappattinam in Tamil Nadu state, the worst-affected region in India.

The local administration has handled scores of queries from individuals and organisations wanting to adopt the children.

But fears of human trafficking have made the government tread with caution.

The emphasis now is on rehabilitating these children in the local communities.

Suryakala, a district social welfare officer in Nagappattinam, says many children they talked to preferred to remain here rather than move out of the area.

The local administration has asked those interested in adoption to send in applications. But they are in no hurry to move these children out.

Diversion

The fury of the tsunami's waves has left a deep scar on most of these children.

Leave the children for a while and they leave the play area to huddle in a corner

Mrs Ratham, teacher

If some lost their parents, many others were witness to the devastation and have been trying to cope with the trauma.

Spending time with other children in their age-group provides them with a diversion for a while. But only for a while.

A day-care centre run by a local church in Nagappattinam has around 40 children who have lost one of their parents.

Rosemary, a local teacher, says: "These children are traumatised. Some have become irritable and disinterested."

Poongkulali plays in the centre's over-two-year-olds group, where her mother drops her every morning.

Ask her about the tsunami and tears well in her eyes. "There was water everywhere... my father is no more," she says.

A few more questions and she looked dazed.

Mrs Ratham is another teacher who is trying to help children get over the trauma of the tsunami.

"We make the children spend more time playing and singing so as to divert their attention from the tragedy. It has been difficult to get the children to concentrate even on playing," she says.

"Leave them for a while and they leave the play area to huddle in a corner."

Lobbying hard

Around 60 children have been put up in an orphanage run by the Zion Church in Nagappattinam.

Parvathi lost her parents but has returned to the school to take her examinations.

She visits her relatives once a month and says she prefers to stay in Nagappattinam.

Local charities and social activists have lobbied hard with the government not to "give away" these children for adoption.

Aftab, a young activist, says he learned a lot from the aftermath of the Gujarat earthquake in 2000.

He says that in the past two months there have been several instances of representatives of organisations trying to "forcibly" take away orphans.


Nagappattinam was one of India's worst-hit areas


"The local community objected and expressed its willingness to take care of such children," says Aftab.

"None of these children want to be moved out," he says.

The local administration, Aftab says, is still not clear about what it wants to do with them.

He has met representatives of different villages who back the idea not to move them out.

"Why should these children be sent to orphanages and homes far from here?" he asks.


Efforts by individuals like Aftab seem to have had an impact.

The local administrator's office has decided against any hasty decision.

One official summed up the dilemma faced by the government: "The issue of children is a delicate matter in any community... one wrong step and we will invite the wrath of the people."


Sunil Raman


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/4312453.stm

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RE: Tough decisions on tsunami orphans Tsunami - 09.03.2005 17:55:41
UN: Hazardous Waste Dumped on Somali Shores by Tsunami By VOA News
06 March 2005


Somalia coast


The United Nations says the December 26 Indian Ocean tsunami dumped tons of hazardous waste on the shores of Somalia.

A spokesman for the U.N. Environment Program says containers filled with nuclear, chemical and medical waste broke apart when they washed ashore, and have been spread by the weather.

The spokesman says there have been reports from northern Somalia of illnesses consistent with radiation sickness, including respiratory infections, mouth ulcers, abdominal hemorrhages and unusual skin diseases.

The United Nations says foreign companies, many from Europe, began dumping toxic waste on Somalia's shore in the 1980s, but the practice accelerated after the 1991 overthrow of dictator Mohamed Siad Barre. The tsunami is believed to have dislodged the hazardous materials.

Some information provided by AFP and Reuters.

http://www.voanews.com/english/2005-03-06-voa14.cfm

http://www.voanews.com/vietnamese/2005-03-06-voa12.cfm

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Indian Ocean tsunami alert agreed - 10.03.2005 13:16:06

The system is needed to avoid a repeat of December's disaster

Indian Ocean tsunami alert agreed

Indian Ocean countries and UN experts have agreed on a timetable for a tsunami early warning system.
At a meeting in Paris, delegates decided the system, which could save thousands of lives, would be installed in three stages.

However, the cost of the system and the location of a central tsunami warning office have yet to be decided.

An estimated 300,000 people died when giant waves, set off by an earthquake, laid waste to Indian Ocean coastlines.

Only countries bordering the Pacific Ocean are covered by a tsunami warning system at present.


Tsunami early warning system
Experts at the Paris meeting voiced hopes that similar systems could one day be installed across the Mediterranean and the Atlantic Ocean.

'Educational issue'

In the first, interim step towards a full tsunami warning system, Japan and the US will provide alerts on seismic activity in the Indian Ocean region.

The second step will see tidal movement gauges fitted near Thailand, Indonesia and Malaysia, while 15 such gauges that are already in place will be upgraded.

In the third and final phase, expected to be completed by the end of 2006, a regional warning centre will be built, with links to a network of gauges and underwater sensors across the region.

UN representatives and the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission will meet again to work out the cost of the system and the location of the warning centre.

Reid Basher, a senior advisor at the UN's International Strategy for Disaster Reduction, said the new international system would only work if individual nations also trained people in reacting to tsunami warnings.

"Countries still have to get the educational issue resolved," he said.



http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/4332109.stm

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Former US Presidents Brief Bush on Tsunami Relief - 11.03.2005 05:36:24
Former US Presidents Brief Bush on Tsunami Relief
By Paula Wolfson
Washington
08 March 2005


Presidents George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush and Bill Clinton at White House

President Bush got an update on tsunami relief efforts Tuesday from his two predecessors, former Presidents Bush and Clinton. All three stressed the importance of helping the victims of the disaster.

The two former presidents led a national campaign in the United States to raise private funds to help countries devastated by the Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami. They recently returned from an extensive tour of affected areas.

President Clinton says they were impressed by the will of the people they met to overcome adversity.

"The report basically says that these people have done an unbelievable job dealing with their losses and cleaning up, but there is a lot of work yet to be done, particularly in the hardest-hit countries," he said.

Mr. Clinton says everywhere they went people came up and thanked them for the help extended by Americans, from the aid workers, to the troops who distributed emergency supplies, to those who donated money and time to tsunami relief charities. Former President Bush, the current president's father, says attitudes toward the United States have changed and cites a new poll conducted in Indonesia.

"And it is a dramatic change," he said. "They have seen the kindness, the outpouring of support for the tsunami victims. That has turned public opinion very much in favor of the United States."

The White House says Americans have contributed about one billion dollars to private tsunami relief efforts. President Clinton says recipients of the aid know how deeply individuals half a world away were touched by their plight.

"When you relate to people on a human basis you send a message that our common humanity matters more than our differences," he said. "When people believe that, America wins, the cause of freedom wins. And it was wonderful to see."

A few hours before he came to the White House, it was announced that former President Clinton will be undergoing another round of heart surgery later this week. Mr. Clinton told reporters he will have some fluid drained from his chest and some scar tissue removed that resulted from the heart bypass operation he had last year. But he said, overall, he feels well and joked that before he goes into the hospital on Thursday, he will be playing in a charity golf tournament to raise money for tsunami relief.

http://www.voanews.com/english/2005-03-08-voa61.cfm

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Sri Lankan Tsunami Family - 11.03.2005 05:41:57
Sri Lankan Tsunami Family, Baby, Visit US Congress
By Dan Robinson
Capitol Hill
09 March 2005


Jenita and Murugupillai Jeyarajah with infant son and Tsunami survivor Abilash (Baby 81)

A Sri Lankan couple, and their four-month-old baby, paid a visit to Capitol Hill Wednesday as part of efforts by U.S. legislators to fight woman and child exploitation in the wake of disasters such as the Indian Ocean tsunami.

Baby 81 was the name given by a hospital in Sri Lanka to little Abilash Jeyarajah, who was found in rubble after the tsunami struck in December.

Then two months old, he was the 81st patient admitted in the wake of the tsunami.

After being claimed by at least eight other couples, and making international headlines in the process, he was finally reunited with his parents but not before a legal challenge and a court-ordered DNA test.

This week, parents, Jenita and Murugupillai Jeyarajah, were flown to the United States with their infant son for the first of what has been a flurry of appearances and media interviews in which they talked about their experiences.

One of their stops was the U.S. Capitol, where they stood with two lawmakers announcing the latest response by members of Congress to the tsunami.

The tsunami orphaned thousands of children across the wide area of the Indian Ocean struck by the devastating waves.

Amid concerns many might fall victim to individuals or groups trying to abduct or use them for sexual or labor exploitation, U.S. lawmakers have been exercising their legislative powers to propose laws aimed at helping protect people affected by crisis situations.

With baby Abilash making himself heard in the background, Congresswoman Nita Lowey explained a bill called The Women and Children in Crisis and Conflict Protection Act.

.....

http://www.voanews.com/english/2005-03-09-voa72.cfm

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Bank has promised $600 million - 11.03.2005 10:18:13
Asian Development Bank Pledges $600 Million in Tsunami Aid
By Tim Johnston
Jakarta
10 March 2005



The Asian Development Bank has promised $600 million in grants to the five countries worst affected by December's Indian Ocean tsunami. The president of the bank, Haruhiko Kuroda, who is visiting Indonesia, says the aid will be carefully monitored to avoid corruption.

The $600 million trust fund is to be distributed to Indonesia, India, the Maldives, Sri Lanka and Thailand. The Asian Development Bank says half the money will go to Indonesia, the hardest-hit country, with more than 220,000 dead and missing, and huge areas swept clean of housing and infrastructure.

Haruhiko Kuroda is the president of the ADB, a non-profit lending organization. After his meetings with Indonesian officials in Jakarta Thursday, he said that bank officials will monitor the funds closely.

"We have to secure assistance actually reaches to the people who need assistance," he explained. "Here we have, of course, many mechanisms to assure that assistance will actually reach the people who need assistance."

He said the bank and the international anti-corruption watchdog Transparency International will hold a meeting in April in Jakarta to look at ways to ensure that tsunami aid is not misused.

Mr. Kuroda also is meeting with Indonesian officials to discuss broader economic issues. He says he believes that the Indonesian economy, currently expanding at just over five percent a year, could grow by more than six percent if foreign direct investment, or FDI, can be attracted to the country.


Tsunami survivor stands at his house at Mulia village in Banda Aceh

"For Indonesia, I think FDI is much needed because domestic consumption recovered, domestic investment is recovering, but FDI is not and if FDI can be attracted more in coming years that would certainly contribute to export growth, investment growth and total economic growth," he said.

He says the private sector will have to play a significant role in attracting investment. He also warns that the government needs to continue tackling corruption and the legal uncertainties that have made investors, both domestic and foreign, wary of putting money into Indonesia.

http://www.voanews.com/english/2005-03-10-voa18.cfm

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RE: Bank has promised $600 million - 16.03.2005 13:13:24
Americans Recover Record of Couple's Last Moments Before Asian Tsunami
By Rosanne Skirble
Washington, D.C.
03 March 2005

We all know about the power of the Internet to connect people in a community or on opposite ends of the earth. But one family, grieving over the sudden death of two of its loved ones in last December's Asian tsunami, has felt the Internet's power in a remarkable, personal way.

Christian Pilet is a missionary from North Bend, Washington. A month after the December 26th tsunami devastated Indian Ocean coastal communities and killed more than a quarter million people, Christian packed his bags and set off to Thailand to help survivors. Christian and his friend Cameron Craig, a youth minister from Ohio, were walking along a beach strewn with rubble from the tsunami.

In the debris, Christian says, Cameron caught sight of a battered digital camera. "He said, 'Hey look, I found this camera and it is smashed. What should we do with it?' I said, 'I don't know. It doesn't look like it would be much use.' He said, 'Let's take the card out...you never know [what you might find].'"


Christian Pilet put the camera's removable memory card in his pocket and kept walking. Later that night, they loaded the images successfully into Christian's laptop computer.


Camera's last shot of the tsunami


"For us it was absolutely stunning," says Christian. "It was like hearing somebody speak their last words, and then they are cut off mid-sentence. That is how it was. You see this very happy couple having a wonderful time and then the picture of the wave coming. The wave is coming, and then it is there and then there is silence."

Christian Pilet was determined to identify the couple. When he returned home, his wife began to search the Internet for a photo match.

"It was the first hit that she did," he says. "She had done a Google search and pulled it up and she clicked. And she said, 'This is the guy.' And I remember thinking, 'There is no way that you just click and [from] the hundreds of missing people pages that you are going to pick just the one.' And, sure enough, the next morning I got up and looked at it, and it was the one."


John and Jackie Knill enjoying the beach in Thailand before the tsunami

The missing people turned out to be Canadian tourists John and Jackie Knill, both 54. Christian Pilet drove to Canada to deliver the pictures to the couple's three sons. Jackie's sister, Terri Maguire, says the family is comforted knowing how John and Jackie spent their last moments.

"It gave me a sense of calm because I knew they weren't running in terror. But each person in the family has dealt with it a little different," she says. And, having been there in Thailand, Terri's husband Roy adds, "Truthfully, it gave me a sense of peace and closure about the whole issue. It is an end chapter to two beautiful lives."

Terri Maguire says that, ever since their story was picked up by the news media, there has been an outpouring of public sympathy for the Knill family. They've started the Knill Thailand Fund, which has already raised $60,000 to help build a school in a country that John and Jackie loved so much.

http://www.voanews.com/english/AmericanLife/2005-03-03-voa34.cfm
<bài viết được chỉnh sửa lúc 27.03.2005 05:13:45 bởi HongYen >

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RE: Bank has promised $600 million - 17.03.2005 13:08:24
Some Tsunami Aid Groups Stop Seeking Money

Wed Mar 16, 2:26 AM ET U.S. National - AP
By DAVID PACE, Associated Press Writer


A young Indonesian girl cries on her damaged house in Lhoknga, on the west coast in Aceh province. Seismologists say there is a heightened risk that a major earthquake may soon strike the western coast of Sumatra as a result of the monster quake that generated the December 26 tsunami.(AFP/File/Choo Youn-Kong)

WASHINGTON - Despite reconstruction costs estimated at up to $12 billion, several major charities and relief groups have stopped soliciting donations for survivors of December's Indian Ocean tsunami. At least one has begun returning money to donors.

Sensitized by recent charity scandals, agencies say they're being careful not to accept more money than they can legitimately spend to help tsunami victims.

The American Red Cross (news - web sites) and British-based Oxfam stopped raising tsunami relief funds over a month ago, when pledges hit spending targets. Britain's Disasters Emergency Committee stopped last month, for the same reason.

Catholic Relief Services also has ceased active solicitation, with $114 million in hand for $80 million in currently programmed tsunami relief work. Doctors Without Borders (news - web sites) has returned more than $500,000 in donations it couldn't use.

"We didn't want the restricted funds to outpace our capacity to use them effectively in the field," said Nicolas de Torrente, executive director of Doctors Without Borders. "We want to be responsible toward our donors and respect their wishes, that if they give for the tsunami, it will be used for that."

Since the Dec. 26 tsunami killed more than 170,000 people in 11 Asian countries, governments have pledged more than $6 billion in relief and reconstruction funds. The United States initially pledged $350 million, including $226 million the U.S. military spent in emergency relief. President Bush (news - web sites) has asked Congress to increase the overall U.S. aid package to $950 million.

.....................

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=519&ncid=519&e=20&u=/ap/20050316/ap_on_re_us/tsunami_relief_3

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India 'moved east' after tsunami - 20.03.2005 23:35:14


Thursday, 17 March, 2005, 17:38 GMT

India 'moved east' after tsunami

A seismologist in India says that the country has moved closer to Indonesia due to the massive earthquake which triggered the tsunami in December.
Dr Vineet Gahlaut said that India had shifted a few centimetres eastwards.

He said the earthquake had increased stress on the fault system separating India and Indonesia and heightened the threat of another big earthquake.

Dr Gahlaut made his comments after a one-month survey of the Earth's surface in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands.

Satellite technology

The expedition reveals the geographical distance between India and Indonesia - the epicentre of the deadly earthquake - has been reduced by between five metres and 15mm.

The amount of movement depended on the closeness of different areas to the epicentre of the quake, Dr Gahlaut explained.

[image]
[/image]

The team is not clear when another earthquake will happen

He said that all of the Indian mainland, but not the Andaman and Nicobar Islands - which are on a different tectonic plate - had moved eastwards.

Dr Gahlaut led a four member team of the National Geophysical Research Institute (NGRI) to the Andaman and Nicobar Islands as part of his research, and used satellite technology to make the measurements.

He told the BBC that the 26 December quake had resulted in the eastward movement of the Indian coastal region by a few millimetres.

At the same time, it had caused the Andaman and Nicobar Islands to move westwards by between one metre and 20m.

In the Indonesian island of Sumatra, he said the movement was as much as 20m.

He said that the distance between Hyderabad, Bangalore and Sumatra had been shortened from 10 to 15mm.

Dr Gahlaut's team conducted its study at eight different places in the Andaman and Nicobar islands throughout January.

The BBC's Omer Farooq reports that a worrying part of the conclusions is the revelation that stress on the Sumatra fault system has increased since the 26 December event.

Our correspondent said this indicated that another big earthquake was possible in the region.

But Dr Gahlaut explained that no one could say how big this earthquake would be and when exactly it would come.

Around 10,000 people were killed by the tsunami waves that hit the Indian mainland after the 26 December quake. Thousands more died in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/4358867.stm

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Tsunami aid shortfall over $4bn - 20.03.2005 23:39:41

The efforts are now focused on reconstruction


Governments around the world have been urged to honour their financial pledges to the countries worst-hit by the Indian Ocean tsunami.
The Asian Development Bank said there was a shortfall of more than $4bn (£2.1bn) promised for rebuilding India, Indonesia, the Maldives and Sri Lanka.

ADB president Haruhiko Kuroda said the world's attention must stay focused as work moved into reconstruction stage.

Nearly 300,000 people died in the 26 December earthquake and sea surges.

Many thousands more had their homes and livelihoods wrecked.

Corruption fears

The ADB delivered its latest post-tsunami report at an international meeting of donor countries, regional governments and aid agencies in the Philippines capital, Manila.

In his opening speech, Mr Kuroda issued a reminder of the dreadful impact of the waves which pummelled the Asian coast:

in India, 700km (430 miles) of road were damaged

in Indonesia's Aceh province 44% of people lost their livelihoods.

in Sri Lanka, 100,000 homes were lost and 65% of the fishing fleet damaged.
Mr Kuroda said aid agencies and governments needed to improve their co-ordination and spend the money in a predictable, transparent, strategic and effective manner.

"Given the scale of the recovery, even with our best efforts at co-ordination, the potential for gaps, overlaps and duplications is significant," he warned, saying tools needed to be developed to avoid this.

He called on the countries receiving aid to fight corruption and make sure that the money was spent wisely.

His concerns were echoed in recorded messages from former US Presidents Bill Clinton and George Bush Senior.

"They [governments] know that the international community is concerned about the use of funds," said Mr Bush, who toured tsunami-hit countries with his successor in February.

"And they told us they intend to be good stewards of the money raised for their aid," he said.

The Sri Lankan Foreign Minister, Lakshman Kadirgamar, has told the BBC that his country has not yet received any of the money promised by governments - although people all over the world had been generous in their contributions.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4361053.stm

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Life in a tsunami camp - 22.03.2005 13:10:04


Monday, 21 March, 2005, 16:51 GMT

Life in a tsunami camp


There is plenty of water but facilities are very basic. However, Kamalini always finds time to bathe her little children. "We must make do with what we have," she says.

..................

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_pictures/4369473.stm

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RE: Life in a tsunami camp - 25.03.2005 16:49:43
Developers, Villagers Clash Over Land Rights in Tsunami-Hit Areas of Thailand
By Ron Corben, Bangkok
24 March 2005

Ratree Kongwatmai


Private developers laying claim to property in tsunami -devastated areas of southern Thailand are clashing with villagers who say the land is theirs. Ron Corben in Bangkok recently visited Phang Nga Province and reports on one fight to hold on to a beachfront property.

Ratree Kongwatmai lost her home and several relatives, including her father, sister, brother and eight-year-old daughter, when huge waves flattened her village in southern Thailand's Phang Nga Province.

The nightmare did not end there. The 31-year-old now faces the prospect of being thrown off the land in Baan Nam Khem village that she says her family has lived on for at least 30 years.


The Far East Company claims 32 hectares of beachfront land at Baan Nam Khem - including eight hectares that Mrs. Ratree and her neighbors say belongs to them.


Mrs. Ratree says the company has stepped up efforts to enforce its claim since the tsunami struck, telling villagers to stay away from what's left of their homes and urging them to accept compensation to leave the land.

Aid agencies say about 30 Thai villages have become involved in similar land disputes since the tsunami, which killed about 8,000 people and destroyed tens of thousands of homes in southern Thailand on December 26.

Under Thai law, if a person can prove he has lived on a plot of land for at least 10 years he can be granted a title deed.

Mrs. Ratree says she and her neighbors have applied for title deeds to the land, despite being turned down in the past. She has brought together 32 families to build shelters on the land to help press their claim.

Orapin Dawson is an education consultant based in Britain has been helping in the area's recovery efforts. She says their story is distressing.

"When the tsunami came, the business company, who has very much influence, has put the sign on [the land] and tried to evacuate [evict] them," she explained. "But they were living there for 30 years [so] they have no place to stay, they have no place to go."


Far East Company claims it has court support for its bid for a title deed to the disputed land that Mrs. Ratree and other villagers at Baan Nam Khem in Phang Nga province are also contesting
But Mrs. Ratree and her fellow villagers could face an uphill task in claiming the land. The Far East Company has applied to the courts for a title deed and its company's lawyers say the families lack the documents to prove their claim.

A lawyer for the company, Niwat Kaewluan, says Far East bought the land from a tin mining business before the tsunami struck.

Mr. Niwat says the villagers had turned down Far East's offer to build houses on other, smaller plots of land.

"The lawyer says new land surveys are being undertaken in the area," he said. "He also criticizes the people who have moved back on the land because it is necessary to prove who had been living there before the tsunami."

The Coalition Network for Andaman Coastal Community Support has been helping people rebuild their villages and prove their land claims. But spokeswoman Sayamol Kaiyoorawong warns of the legal difficulties, particularly if a company can show it has a title deed.

"If the company has the land rights - the land title deed - generally the court will listen, the court only consider the land title deed," she said.


Area devastated by tsunami

Thailand's surveyor-general, Pairoj Phuekvilai, says the Land Department is looking into such disputes, and making new land surveys. His office oversees surveys for property transactions.

"The people who live without certificate [title deed], now we do the ground survey for them to prove the right," he said. "It means the previous occupier can have [the title] if they occupied the land - then we try to solve their problems after the tsunami."

But the department's effort is expected to take at least two more months.

In the meantime, there are fears that businesses may be unwilling to give way easily and may resort to harsh measures to clear land.

Somchai Homla-or is with the Thai law society, which sent a team of lawyers to the tsunami area to help victims with a variety of legal problems, including land disputes.


Baan Nam Khem in Southern Phang Nga province

"They will use dirty tactics or some bad influence in forcing the people out of the land and in this extent the police become the tool of the business sector in harassing the people or even they enforce the law by accusing the people of encroaching on the land of the businessman," he said.

But Mrs. Ratree says she is not afraid and will press on with her legal fight until she and her neighbors win their title deeds and rebuild their homes.

http://www.voanews.com/english/2005-03-24-voa33.cfm

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RE: Life in a tsunami camp - 27.03.2005 05:23:01
Monday, 21 March, 2005, 10:29 GMT
Many wander through the ruins of St Peter's church


By Sanjoy Majumder
BBC News, Mullaitivu

The hollowed out shell of St Peter's church lies on the beach in Mullaitivu, in north-eastern Sri Lanka


Just metres from the sea, only the facade remains. The rest was destroyed by December's tsunami.

Chandran Siskandaraja used to attend church regularly, from his fishing village just a few kilometres away.

"I always found solace here. It was a place of refuge from my troubles," he told the BBC News website.

Now he comes here every evening with several other fellow fishermen.

All of them have one thing in common - they are widowers after the tidal wave claimed their wives.

Many of them wander aimlessly through the ruins of the church.

Others sit and gaze out at the sea, in their hand a bottle of arrack, the locally brewed spirit made of palm or rice.

"We have nothing else to do," Chandran says simply.

"There is no-one at home to go back to."

Family torn apart

Nearly 60% of the men in Chandran's village have lost their wives.

It is a situation mirrored along the coast and is presenting a major social problem.

My wife used to wait for me every day with a cup of tea
Antony


"Many of the women died while their husbands survived simply because they weren't strong enough," says Rachel Bernhard, a field delegate with the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

Others were simply caught unaware.

Antony Karnal had taught his wife to mend his fishing nets, which is what she was doing when the first wave came in.

She grabbed her five children and ran indoors.

Antony, who was outside, managed to survive by clinging on to the branch of a tree.

But his little hut collapsed and was swept away, and with it his family.

In these social set ups, it is the woman who runs the family as a unit
Prof Sivathambi
Tamil scholar


He too comes to St Peter's every day in the late afternoon.

"That's when the local schools let out the children," he says.

"I can't bear to see them - they remind me of my own children. So I come here."

Psychological scar

Antony had been married for 17 years and still struggles to come to terms with his loss.

"My wife used to wait for me every day with a cup of tea when I would come in from the sea," he says, his eyes brimming with tears.

Observers say the trauma of losing their wives has left a deep psychological scar on these men, and many of them are quite simply unable to cope.

"The question of family formation has been deeply affected. In these social set ups, it is the woman who runs the family as a unit," says Professor Sivathambi, a Tamil scholar at Colombo University.

In these heavily male-dominated societies, many say it is difficult for men to be demonstrative of their emotions.

"It is even more difficult when they are fishermen and have to live up to their image as hardened seafarers, able to take on the elements and everything with it," says local teacher Ramanan.

For some of them, it leads to alarming consequences.

I meet Kannan walking on the beach by the church.

His eyes are bloodshot, his shirtsleeve streaked with blood - he has been slashing his arm with a knife.

He lost his wife and his 10-month-old daughter, his only child, in the tsunami.

Once a teetotaller, he has started drinking heavily, locals say.

"Come home with me, I'll take you to my daughter," he tells me.

Somebody comes forward to take him away gently and get him medical attention.

Little help

Aid workers say the psychological impact of the tsunami was the first thing to strike them when they began arriving in the north-east.

Many say the impact was severe on a people already traumatised by years of civil war.

"The family as a unit has been completely stripped bare," says Rachel Bernhard of the ICRC.


Kannan has still to come to terms with the loss of his child


And resolving the problem is not straightforward.

"These men cannot remarry that easily," says Ramanan.

"There are issues of social acceptability, of dowry, of caste to be dealt with.

"They cannot simply marry any woman who is single or willing."

There are other social issues which present a major problem.

"Some of the men have to take care of their children in the absence of their wives," says Ms Bernhard.

It is something they are absolutely unused to.

"It is even more difficult if the children are daughters. It is simply unacceptable socially for a man to be living in close proximity to his girl child," adds Ms Bernhard.

Many of the tsunami victims received counselling from the outset, especially from international aid agencies and religious institutions like the church.

But most of the counsellors targeted young children who had been orphaned - almost none of the fishermen widowers had met a counsellor or had access to psychological help.


'Family backbone'

There are some who say there is a long-term issue to be addressed as well. Women played a vital economic role in fishing families and were pivotal to the marketing of the fish.

"If you go to any village fish market, you will notice that women are the immediate point of sale," says Prof Sivathambi.

As the men come in from the sea with the catch, their wives would help them unload it, sort out the fish and then sell it.

"Men are only the bread earners. Women are the backbone of the family," adds Prof Sivathambi.

"Take them out and it leads to instability."

Sanjoy Majumder


http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/4360345.stm

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RE: Life in a tsunami camp - 27.03.2005 05:31:07
If a tsunami struck again next year, the technology would be ready but the people might not


Friday, 25 March, 2005, 13:34 GMT

Tsunami alert technology - the iron link

By Julianna Kettlewell
BBC News science reporter

By December 2006, the Indian Ocean should be fully kitted out with a brand new hi-tech tsunami early warning system.

The arsenal of wave and pressure sensors, seismographs, data-crunching computers and orbiting satellites will cast a watchful eye over the ocean, looking out for any sinister changes.

If another devastating wave takes shape, a warning will fire off immediately and scientists should be able to predict where, when and just how hard the water will hit.

But that is only half the story. Even if the early warning system can be relied upon to do its job, we still cannot breathe easy.

Coasts around the Indian Ocean are often populated by poor communities who do not have access to modern technology. How is every lonely fisherman and every beach dweller without a phone connection going to be warned in the event of an emergency?

The technology goes a long way but the final mile - leading right up to every door across the region - is by far the hardest.

According to some experts, the spanking new technology is the iron link in a dangerously papery chain.

The hi-tech part can take eight months, but to build up to volunteer level will take longer

Eva Vonn Oelreich, International Red Crescent


Effective disaster response drills in surrounding countries are not unachievable - indeed many are working hard towards them - but they are likely to be on a slower timetable than the high-tech installation.

If a tsunami struck again next year, the technology would be ready, but the people might not be.

"I have no doubt that the technical element of the warning system will work very well," said Professor Bill McGuire, of the Benfield Hazard Research Centre, London, UK.

"But there has to be an effective and efficient communications cascade from the warning centre to the fisherman on the beach and his family and the bar owners."

Infrequent reports

Plans to develop the tsunami early warning technology are steaming ahead.

The operation is being co-ordinated by the UN with the help of scientists from all around the Indian Ocean. The final result will resemble the system already existing in the Pacific Ocean, and will be able to pick up storm surges (big waves caused by storms) as well as tsunami.

The Indian Ocean already has 15 sea level gauges, which broadcast information about changes in water swells. At the moment, they only generate data every hour or so, which is clearly far too infrequent for effective tsunami detection.

But after an upgrade, these sensors will send sea-level updates every three minutes.

"The upgraded instruments will be able to measure sea level accurately and also broadcast it at a faster rate to international centres," said Patricio Bernal, of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization's (Unesco) Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (IOC).

"We expect this to be complete within the next few months."

The next stage will be to install a series of pressure gauges, which sit under the sea and monitor the weight of water on top of them. They transmit data to a buoy floating on the surface, which relays the information to a satellite that alerts a computer in an international early warning centre.

The pressure gauges are expensive pieces of equipment - each buoy unit costs $300,000 (£160,000). The UN has not yet decided how many buoys will be installed, but it is likely to be several.

The Pacific Ocean has several million dollars worth of early warning equipment and, although nobody is able to put a figure on the Indian Ocean system, it will probably be in the same ball-park.

All the ocean sensors and seismographs will broadcast their information first to an international early warning centre and then on to national centres.

Emergency response

It is there that the iron link ends. Although the UN is overseeing the technology installation, it will be up to individual governments to co-ordinate and plan their own emergency responses.

"I think there is a lot to do there," admitted Dr Bernal. "Usually, emergency infrastructure is not very high on the list of priorities for most governments.

"Detecting a tsunami is only a fraction of the problem - the big problem is how to prepare societies and local populations so they can act appropriately to a warning."


The Pacific system works in quite a simple way


The International Red Crescent Society is working with individual governments to help them develop their emergency strategies.

They say that, because the tsunami risk is actually extremely low, the important thing is to take a multi-hazard approach - otherwise, over the years, interest will fade. In other words, people will be taught how to behave in the event of a cyclone, earthquake, storm surge or tsunami.

"Even after a year, you see how the interest is fading," said Eva Vonn Oelreich, head of disaster preparedness at the humanitarian society. "That is why we strongly advocate a multi-hazard response."

Each community with a high hazard risk will contain a series of volunteers. These are the people who will be told first about an impending disaster and they will inform their local population.

They may have hand megaphones or whistles and will cycle around their villages warning people.

The community as a whole could be trained how to react to this warning through a series of live performances.

"In Bangladesh, which suffers badly from cyclones, the preferred way to raise awareness is through dramas," said Ms Vonn Oelreich.

"The volunteers perform as if in a disaster. You see women on their own rushing to get to evacuation centres, which is very important because women cannot always go out alone and we need to show that in situations like this different rules apply."

However, this type of effort takes a long time to achieve results.

"It is an enormous job," said Ms Vonn Oelreich. "After three years you have solid work on the ground, but it is not institutionalised unless you see it can work for a 10-year period.

"The hi-tech part can take eight months, but to build up to volunteer level will take longer. It will be quite a few years before the communities are trained in alert signals and evacuation mechanisms."



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UNHCR to Leave Tsunami-Hit Aceh - 27.03.2005 05:44:07

UNHCR logo


By Lisa Schlein
Geneva
25 March 2005

The U.N. Refugee Agency says it is leaving tsunami-hit Aceh Province at the request of the Indonesian authorities. The agency says it expects its withdrawal to be completed by Saturday.

The U.N. Refugee Agency says it is leaving Aceh because the emergency phase of the huge international relief effort is ending and the long-term reconstruction phase is set to begin.

UNHCR Spokeswoman, Marie-Helene Verney says there are hundreds of international and private aid agencies working in Aceh. She says the Indonesian government has said it would only allow those foreign agencies that are involved in large scale rehabilitation to remain.

"We have been talking with the government and our impression was that they consider that we were not amongst the most needed agencies," Ms. Verney said. "It is true that we have a six-month program there. We have done about three months of it. We are handing over what we have done, so it is not all going to stop. It is being handed over to the government and to other U.N. agencies and, indeed, the NGOs [non-governmental organizations]."

Ms. Verney says the agency is disappointed at having to leave. And, she says, UNHCR representatives have told the Indonesian authorities they are prepared to continue working in the tsunami ravaged province if needed.

The UNHCR's mandate is to protect refugees fleeing violence and persecution. It does not normally respond to natural disasters.

Ms. Verney says the agency got involved at the request of U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan who asked the UNHCR to take the lead in providing shelter to 100,000 homeless victims of the disaster because of its experience in dealing with emergency situations.

Aceh rebels have been involved in a long war for independence from Indonesia. The UNHCR, at times, has been at loggerheads with the government over the treatment of ethnic Acehnese refugees who had been forcibly returned. Several years ago, it ran into problems with the Indonesian authorities over the breakaway province of East Timor.

Ms. Verney denies reports that the Indonesian government asked the UNHCR to leave because it distrusts its presence in this volatile area.

"The relations that we have with the authorities on the ground in Banda Aceh for the past three months have really been very good," she said. "So, I do not think this has anything to do with what has happened in the past. We are not the only agency that is going to leave. We might be the first one, but we are not the only one. I mean more people are going to go in the next few weeks. So, we are not being singled out, in other words."

Ms. Verney says the UNHCR has about 3$3 million left for tsunami relief operations in Aceh. She says the agency will ask donors how it should use the funds not already spent. She says the agency would like to use the money for other underfunded operations, such as the one in Sudan. But she says it is up to the donors to decide.

http://www.voanews.com/english/2005-03-25-voa23.cfm
<bài viết được chỉnh sửa lúc 27.03.2005 05:47:13 bởi HongYen >

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Most tsunami dead female - 27.03.2005 12:11:46
Saturday, 26 March, 2005, 00:27 GMT
Most tsunami dead female - Oxfam

In four villages in Aceh Besar district 189 of 676 survivors were female


More women than men were killed by the Asian tsunami, Oxfam figures from India, Indonesia and Sri Lanka suggest

In some regions the disaster claimed four times as many women as men.

The charity says women were worst-hit because they were waiting on beaches for fishermen to return, or at home looking after children at the time.

The research comes exactly three months after the under-sea earthquake caused a wave that devastated coastlines around the Indian Ocean.

Oxfam International focused their research on the Indonesian province of Aceh, the Cuddalore district of India, and took data from camps across Sri Lanka.

In four villages in Aceh Besar district only 189 of 676 survivors were female - men outnumbering women three to one.

'Disproportionate impact'

In four villages in North Aceh district, 82 men died, compared to 284 women.

A staggering 80% of those who died in Kuala Cangkoy in North Aceh were women.

This disproportionate impact will lead to problems for years to come unless everyone working on the aid effort addresses the issue now

Becky Buell
Oxfam policy director


India suffered a similar fate with three times as many women being killed as men in Cuddalore district - the second most seriously affected area in India.

In one Indian village, Pachaankuppam, the only people who died were female.

The story is the same for Sri Lanka where the number of male survivors in the emergency camps far outweigh the women.

Becky Buell, Oxfam's policy director, said the tsunami had dealt a "crushing blow" to both women and men.

"This disproportionate impact will lead to problems for years to come unless everyone working on the aid effort addresses the issue now."

She said there are already reports of rapes, harassment and forced marriages coming from emergency camps around the region.

She urged people to "wake up" to the issue and ensure "protection, inclusion and empowerment" of female survivors.

Errands

The report suggested a number of reasons for the high proportion of female deaths.

On the Indian coast many women were waiting for the fishermen to return with their catches, while in Batticaloa on the east coast of Sri Lanka, the tsunami hit at the exact moment many of the women were taking baths in the sea.

Because it was a Sunday, many of the women in Aceh were at home with the children rather than at work.

The men in most parts of Aceh were either carrying out errands or in their boats out at sea, where the waves were less ferocious.

Ms Buell called on governments and NGOs to help ensure women are given the same opportunities as men to rebuild their lives.

She added it is important to work with men who had lost their wives and teach them how to care properly for their children.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/4383573.stm

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Tsunami alerts cause panic across Asia - 29.03.2005 10:27:17
Tsunami alerts cause panic across Asia after huge quake off Indonesia

1 hour, 15 minutes ago South Asia - AFP

Mon, Mar 28, 2005

BANDA ACEH, Indonesia (AFP) - A huge earthquake off the coast of Indonesia triggered tsunami alerts across Asia, causing widespread panic in countries where over 270,000 people were killed by giant waves just three months ago.

The undersea quake measuring over 8.0 on the Richter Scale prompted India, Malaysia, Sri Lanka and Thailand to join Indonesia in issuing tsunami alerts. Unconfirmed television reports said "tens of people" had been killed on the remote Indonesian island of Nias.

However nearly three hours after the quake struck off the northwest Indonesian coast, Indonesian and Thai meteorological officials gave the all clear and said it appeared the quake had not caused any tsunami.
.....
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/afp/20050328/wl_sthasia_afp/asiaquake_050328200231

...............................

http://www.bbc.co.uk/vietnamese/regionalnews/story/2005/03/050328_earthquake.shtml


<bài viết được chỉnh sửa lúc 29.03.2005 10:55:58 bởi HongYen >

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Indonesia: Relief Operations Fully Underway - 11.04.2005 15:51:41
Indonesia: Relief Operations Fully Underway

By Nancy Collins
Gunung Sitoli, Indonesia
01 April 2005

Relief operations are fully underway on Indonesia's Nias Island, by the third day after an eight-point-seven magnitude earthquake struck the region, killing hundreds of people. VOA's Nancy-Amelia Collins filed this report from the Nias capital, Gunung Sitoli. It is narrated by Ernest Leong.



After trickling in for two days, aid to the shattered island began pouring in Thursday, with international aid organizations and the Indonesian military ferrying in water, food and medicine.

Scores of people sought refuge in temporary shelters in the island's capital, Gunung Sitoli.

As many as 30 percent of the town's buildings were destroyed when the quake struck late Monday. It came just three months after a magnitude nine quake in the same area sparked a tsunami that killed over 300,000 people across the Indian Ocean region.

Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono visited the island Thursday, and promised to take quick action to help residents, including getting the electricity running again.

The president says, in this emergency situation, the people of Indonesia must unite to overcome their hardships and rebuild their lives.

While Nias bore the brunt of the damage -- 500 of the 518 reported deaths occurred there, according to a UN survey -- Simuelue and Sumatra Islands were also affected.


Brian Williams

Brian Williams, who owns a resort on Simeulue says, "I just had a call from the governor of the island who said that the world is not helping Simeulue. We need help in Simeulue so I'm organizing boats now."

There are deaths, destroyed buildings and traumatized survivors, including Juan Pedro Garcia.

"At the moment, I think it's just too uneasy. There's too much damage. No one knows what's going on. It's all up in the air at the moment. We just don't know," says Juan.

The full extent of the damage remains unclear, as rescue efforts continue.

http://www.voanews.com/english/2005-04-01-voa12.cfm


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RE: Indonesia: Relief Operations Fully Underway - 11.04.2005 15:56:11

A fishing boat sits atop a house near a refugee camp, Tuesday, March 22, 2005, in Banda Aceh


Meeting Addresses Tsunami Aid Accountability

By Nancy-Amelia Collins
Jakarta
08 April 2005

A fishing boat sits atop a house near a refugee camp, Tuesday, March 22, 2005, in Banda Aceh
Following the devastating earthquake and tsunami in the Indian Ocean last December, billions of dollars in aid was pledged to countries hit hard by the disaster. Not too long afterward, people started expressing concern that the donated funds might be misused. International experts met in Jakarta to discuss ways to ensure the aid gets to those who need it.

The experts say transparency and accountability are the keys to safeguarding the estimated $5 billion in aid pledged for the tsunami-affected countries.

The conference was called to discuss ways to minimize corruption in the distribution of aid. It was organized by the Asian Development Bank and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and attended by a slew of corruption experts from the public and private sectors throughout the Asia-Pacific region.

Jak Jabes of the Asian Development Bank says cooperation among governments and aid donors is essential to fight corruption.

"Those stakeholders involved in tsunami assistance must ensure transparency and accountability in their operations,” said Mr. Jabes. “In particular in the management of the financial flows. For this, up-to-date information must be made actively available to any interested party."

The majority of aid will go to rebuilding Indonesia's province of Aceh, the region worst hit by the December 26 earthquake and tsunami. Indonesia is consistently rated as one of the most corrupt countries in the world, and donors are worried about how well their contributions will be monitored.

Mr. Jabes says the answer to these concerns lies in organization and coordination.

"Donors should coordinate with governments and among themselves to avoid duplication of assistance schemes,” he added. “They should also establish uniform procurement rules, maintain and publish clear books and records and provide assurance of full internal and external controls. They must further make a careful assessment of the local conditions so that allocated resources match needs."

Conference participants say the meeting was the start of a long-term process of fighting corruption and promoting transparency in reconstruction aid, which will extend beyond the immediate post-tsunami period.

http://www.voanews.com/english/2005-04-08-voa80.cfm

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Tsunami children get puppet help - 19.04.2005 08:08:56
Monday, 11 April, 2005, 12:27 GMT 13:27 UK
Tsunami children get puppet help
By Steven Shukor
BBC News website


Dr Jones says the children make a connection with the puppets


Lynne Jones could see that the brightly coloured bird puppet in her hand had the silent Indonesian girl captivated.

The six-year-old had not spoken since the 26 December Indian Ocean tsunami swept away her village of Lamno, on Aceh province's west coast, taking her mother with it.

Rosie survived only by clinging onto a palm tree, and was rescued after two days, crying for her mother.


Her grandmother brought her to Dr Jones, a child psychiatrist with the International Medical Corps (IMC), a humanitarian organisation providing mental health assistance to the tsunami-hit region.

With 15 years experience working with children in disaster zones from Kosovo to Indonesia, Dr Jones has found "play", including puppetry, to be an effective means of communication.

Puppets are one step away from being human and so there is distance but at the same time we can identify with them

Dr Lynne Jones
She admits to never leaving home without her bag of toys which contains among other playthings, a menagerie of finger-puppets and hand puppets, including tigers, birds, turtles, monkeys and crows.


In the wake of the Asian tsunami, she discovered that many young survivors were ignorant of what had befallen them and she started information workshops using puppets to explain the tsunami.

"The puppets are all animals. They are all culturally neutral and they can take on different roles," she says.

"Puppets are one step away from being human and so there's distance but at the same time we can identify with them."

She has taken care not to include puppets of humans, pigs or dogs - taboo for Muslims in Aceh.

She uses the puppets to explain the tsunami - its causes and effects -, how to avoid getting caught up in one in the future and to help the youngsters deal with their loss.


Play therapy

She also uses the puppets for child therapy. With the support of an interpreter, she created a simple scenario based on Rosie's own experience but set in a different context.

She had gleaned information about Rosie's story from speaking to her grand-mother and other family members.

She laid out several puppets on the mat before the little girl.

"She was very interested," says Dr Jones. "She chose the little bird. We gave the little bird the girl's name."


[The children] see that somebody is acknowledging the painful thoughts and feelings they have

Dr Jones
Dr Jones made up a story of a young bird living in a tree with her mother.

"The wind came and blew all the birds in the forest away. The little bird clung on and managed to survive but her mother had gone."

Dr Jones expressed this by throwing the mother-bird puppet away from her hand.

"People who see me do this asked me: 'How can you do this? It's too shocking for them'.

"But it is not shocking to the children because they are thinking about it all the time.

"They see that somebody is acknowledging the painful thoughts and feelings they have."

The stranded little bird is eventually rescued by a monkey who takes her to meet other members of her family who survived.


"After a very long time the little bird started to feel better and wanted to sing again," Dr Jones told Rosie.

At the end of the session, Dr Jones said the little girl wanted to take the bird home with her.

She came back the following week and brought her cousin whose parents had died, who also wanted a story.

Although the healing process will be a long one, Dr Jones says the girl has since started speaking again and is making new relationships with surviving family members.

In the days following the tsunami, the IMC sent teams of doctors and nurses to provide emergency medical relief in Aceh as well as Sri Lanka.

Outsiders can listen. It is as simple as that. People want to feel that what has happened to them is significant

Dr Jones
That work has now evolved into a variety of programmes including one to develop long-term community-based mental health services, which involves training primary health care staff.

Dr Jones has found that being an outsider is a real benefit in helping survivors of mass disasters.

"In normal circumstances if a loss occurs your neighbours and friends will rally round and support you.

"But when everyone is affected, everyone protects everyone else by not talking in order not to burden them, and there is a feeling that one's own individual losses are somehow without meaning in the larger catastrophe.

"Outsiders can listen. It is as simple as that. People want to feel that what has happened to them is significant," she said.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4416267.stm

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