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»Asia quake death toll tops 13,000«







Fuuck, huge earthquake that starts off all this tsunamis, insane stuff!
CNN article
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CHENNAI, India (CNN) -- As dawn broke Monday across the Bay of Bengal, countries struck by tsunamis in the wake of the most powerful earthquake the planet has seen in 40 years focused on relief and rescue efforts, and said the death toll from the giant waves -- already more than 13,000 -- is expected to rise further.

The tsunamis also left thousands injured, thousands missing and hundreds of thousands homeless in Indonesia, India, Sri Lanka and Thailand.

Some of the tsunamis reached as far as 1,600 kilometers (91,000 miles) from the epicenter of the 9.0 magnitude quake, which was located about 160 kilometers (100 miles) off the coast of Indonesia's Sumatra Island at a depth of about 10 kilometers (6.2 miles).

The quake struck about 7 a.m. Sunday (midnight GMT Saturday), according to the U.S. Geological Survey's National Earthquake Center.

It is the fourth-largest earthquake since such measurements began in 1899, according to the NEIC, tying with a 1952 quake in Kamchatka, Russia.

More than 4,500 people have been reported dead in Sri Lanka. Most of them, authorities said, were in the eastern district of Batticaloa. Thousands were missing and more than a half million displaced.

In southern Sri Lanka, 200 prisoners escaped when the waves swept away a high-security prison in Matara.

Witnesses in the eastern Sri Lankan port city Trincomalee reported 14 meter (40-foot) waves hitting inland as far as a kilometer (0.6 miles).

The Sri Lankan government declared a state of emergency, and, along with the government of the Maldives, has requested international assistance, the United Nations' Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs reported.

The United Nations has warned of epidemics within days unless health systems in the affected areas can cope.

"This may be the worst natural disaster in recent history because it is affecting so many heavily populated coastal areas ... so many vulnerable communities," the U.N.'s Emergency Relief Coordinator Jan Egeland told CNN.

As the sun rose, 20,000 Sri Lankan soldiers and naval personnel launched relief and rescue efforts. India sent six warships, carrying supplies, along with helicopters.

Priorities including identifying the hardest-hit areas and air-dropping supplies, along with shepherding stranded people to safer areas.

Sri Lankan authorities imposed a curfew overnight, and many residents remained concerned about the possibility of additional tsunamis.

The country has been in the throes of a civil war, and land mines uprooted by the waves were hampering relief efforts.

Some tourists, meanwhile, had been evacuated from the hard-hit eastern coasts to the capital, Colombo, on the west coast and unaffected.

At first light, many Sri Lankans ventured out to scour the debris for belongings or to search for information on missing family members.

Although India was giving aid to Sri Lanka, that country also was reeling from the aftermath of the quake and tsunamis. India's official government news agency, Press Trust of India, said at least 4,000 Indians were killed, and more bodies were being recovered.

A resident of Chennai (formerly Madras) in Tamil Nadu district -- India's hardest-hit area -- said he saw several people being swept out to sea.

Along India's southeastern coast, several villages appeared to have been swept away, and thousands of fishermen -- including 2,000 from the Chennai area alone -- who were at sea when the waves thundered ashore have not returned. (Full story)

Along the coast, brick foundations were all that remained of village homes. In Tamil Nadu state, 1,725 people have been confirmed dead, and officials feared many more died on the remote Andaman and Nicobar islands, where dozens of aftershocks were centered, but communication with the mainland was cut off.

Efforts to provide survivors with food and shelter were hampered by the overwhelming magnitude of the damage.

Thai authorities said more than 400 people are dead, and hundreds are missing.

One witness said Phuket's famed Laguna Beach resort area is "completely gone." The area provided 40 percent of Thailand's $10 billion annual income from tourism.

Among the missing were scuba divers who had been exploring the Emerald Cave off Phuket's coast.

Phuket's airport -- which closed when its runways flooded -- reopened, but most roads in the area remained closed, as officials tried to assess the damage.

Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra arrived in Phuket and declared the situation "under control." He told CNN he planned to direct rescue and relief efforts overnight.

Witnesses reported guests drowned in their hotel rooms near the coast as 10 meter (30-foot) waves washed ashore.

Others reported narrow escapes -- including a Spaniard who had been aboard a boat when the wave approached.

The captain began screaming and turned the boat directly into a nearby shore, where he beached it.

As those aboard jumped from the craft and scrambled up the steep beach, they turned back to see the waves crush their boat, the Spaniard said.

Communication difficulties
More than 500 people have been confirmed dead in Indonesia -- many of them in Aceh, in northern Sumatra, about 160 kilometers (100 miles) from the quake's epicenter, according to local reports.

The quake also inflicted heavy damage on the area, which is a hotbed of rebel activity, before two tsunamis slammed the coastline.

Access and communications were difficult if not impossible; the death toll remained a mystery on the west coast of Aceh, where communications had been completely wiped out. News agencies in the country have reported more than 4,000 dead.

The tsunamis struck with no warning to those in coastal areas, as no warning system exists for the Indian Ocean, said Eddie Bernard, director of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Pacific Marine and Environmental Labs in Seattle.

Staffers at warning centers that cover the Pacific Basin and the U.S. West Coast were aware of the quake and the possibility of tsunamis, said Laura Kong, director of the International Tsunami Information Center in Honolulu, Hawaii.

"They were able to make contact, but they did not have the proper government officials to notify," she said. "They'll be working on this in the future."

The earthquake is classified as "great" -- the strongest classification given by the NEIC.

NEIC geophysicist Don Blakeman said the tsunamis were triggered by the initial massive jolt.

"The damage is just phenomenal," said Jan Egelund, U.N. emergency relief coordinator. "I think we are seeing now one of the worst natural disasters ever."

Aftershocks
There was disagreement over whether the threat was over. Waverly Person, Blakeman's colleague at NEIC, said the tsunamis are "long over" and residents and visitors should not worry about further tsunamis.

Bernard, however, said the aftershocks are strong enough to produce more tsunamis.

One such aftershock, measuring 7.3 in magnitude, struck about 300 kilometers (200 miles) northwest of Banda Aceh -- on Sumatra's northernmost tip -- more than four hours after the initial quake, according to the NEIC.

The center expects the quake to produce hundreds of smaller aftershocks, under 4.6 magnitude, and thousands smaller than that.

"A quake of this size has some pretty serious effects," Person said.

The quake represented the energy released from "a very large rupture in the earth's crust" more than 1,000 kilometers (600 miles) long. The rupture created shock waves that pushed the water at speeds of up to several hundred kilometers per hour.

It was the strongest earthquake to hit anywhere on Earth since March 1964, when a 9.2 quake struck near Alaska's Prince William Sound.

The strongest recorded earthquake (and records go back to 1899) registered 9.5 on May 22, 1960, in Chile.

Sunday's quake hit a year after the 6.6-magnitude quake in Bam, Iran, which killed more than 30,000 people, injured another 30,000 and destroyed 85 percent of the buildings in the southeastern Iran city.


And a little more


HYDERABAD, India (AP) -- At least 63 people were killed and more than 250 fishermen were missing at sea Sunday after high tidal waves caused by a massive earthquake in Indonesia hit parts of southern India on Sunday, officials said.

At least 36 people were killed in three districts of Andhra Pradesh state and 27 in neighboring Tamil Nadu, they said.

At least 200 fishermen from Andhra Pradesh were missing at sea while another 50 from Tamil Nadu were unaccounted for.

Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Y. Rajashekhar Reddy told reporters that 22 people were killed in Krishna district, 12 in Prakasam district and two in West Godavari.

"This is the impact of the earthquake in Indonesia this morning. There were tidal waves in the sea and the entire coastal belt from Vishakhapatnam to Nellore (districts) has been effected," he said. The tidal waves rose as high as 2 meters (6.56 feet) in some places.

He said water entered the Vishakhapatnam harbor but no casualties were reported there because it was closed for the weekend. Water was receding in some areas but rising in others, and the navy was evacuating people in many low-lying areas, he said.

Earlier, state Chief Secretary Mohan Kanda said 200 Andhra Pradesh fishermen were missing at sea.

In Madras, the capital of neighboring Tamil Nadu state, 27 bodies, presumably of fishermen, were found washed ashore on the popular Marina beach, said the city's fire services chief, S.K. Dogra. He said 50 fishermen were missing in Cuddalore, 180 kilometers (110 miles) south of Madras.

The tidal waves were caused by the 8.5 magnitude earthquake that hit Indonesia and other parts of Southeast Asia, said B.Y. Swamy, an official of the Indian Meteorological Department in the Indian capital, New Delhi. The department also advised people not to venture out to sea for another two days.

Separately, the U.S. Geological Survey reported that an earthquake of 7.3 magnitude was reported in the Nicobar Islands, a remote sparsely populated Indian territory in the Bay of Bengal, 2,250 kilometers (1400 miles) southeast of New Delhi.

Panic-stricken residents, especially those living in multistory buildings, rushed out of their homes after they were jolted awake in the eastern states of Orissa and West Bengal and the southern states of Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu.

Tremors lasting a few seconds were felt around 6.30 a.m. (0100 GMT), PTI said. That was shortly after the quake hit near the Indonesian island of Sumatra.

Rising sea water flooded the huts of nearly 2,500 fishermen living in low lying areas of Madras, also known as Chennai, on India's southeast coast, police said.

In New Delhi, the federal government ordered the navy to help state authorities in rescue operations, and was closely monitoring the situation, NDTV reported.


Man that's insane, poor bastards! Pretty sad, it'd be so sudden! What the...?


posted by hungarian kid
  Weiter, weiter ins Verderben!
Wir müssen leben bis wir sterben!

in-my-opinion.org -> Misc -> Anything that doesn't fit in any other category -> Asia quake death toll tops 13,000



Now it's at 26000 deaths. What the...?

posted by knn
  



Here's the developing story from CNN
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(CNN) -- People across Asia are flocking to makeshift morgues seeking lost loved ones after tsunamis swept across the Indian Ocean from Thailand to Somalia, killing more than 22,000 people.

The giant waves also left thousands injured and missing as well as hundreds of thousands homeless in Indonesia, India, Sri Lanka and Thailand.

Authorities across the region are running out of places to put the dead -- lining them up in schools and stacking them in the street -- as food aid and other supplies for survivors are making their way to affected areas.

The United Nations is asking donor countries to dig deeper, saying this will likely be the costliest disaster ever.

The magnitude 9.0 quake struck about 7 a.m. Sunday (0000 GMT Saturday) and was centered about 100 miles (160 kilometers) off the coast of Indonesia's Sumatra island at a depth of about 6.2 miles (10 kilometers).

Nearly 48 hours later, no one was under any illusion that the death toll would not rise significantly.

The head of the United Nations' emergency humanitarian relief agency said the tsunamis were unprecedented and that it could take years to rebuild some places that were wiped out.

The tsunamis are "not the biggest in recorded history, but the effects may be the biggest ever because many more people live in exposed areas than ever before," said Jan Egeland, undersecretary-general for humanitarian affairs and emergency relief.

With tens of thousands dead, many missing and millions displaced, still more serious problems lie ahead, Egeland said, including widespread illnesses.

Asian government officials conceded Monday that they failed to issue public warnings that could have saved many lives. (Full story)

More than 10,000 people have been reported dead in Sri Lanka. Most of them were in the eastern district of Batticaloa, authorities said.

Thousands were missing, an estimated 1 million were displaced and an estimated 250,000 were homeless.

The Sri Lankan government declared a state of emergency, and, along with the government of the Maldives, requested international assistance, the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs reported.

Some 20,000 Sri Lankan soldiers and naval personnel have launched relief and rescue efforts.

India sent six warships carrying supplies, along with helicopters. Priorities included identifying the hardest-hit areas, airdropping supplies and shepherding stranded people to safer areas.

Italy, France and Pakistan also sent help to Sri Lanka.

The country has been in the throes of a civil war, and land mines uprooted by the tidal waves were hampering relief efforts. But Jeffrey Lunstead, the U.S. ambassador to Sri Lanka, said he was told the Tamil Tiger rebels in the northeast and government forces were cooperating in the aftermath of the disaster.

"That's a good sign," he told CNN.

India and Pakistan also sent equipment to the Maldives, according to the country's high commissioner, Hassan Sobir. He told CNN that communication had been re-established with the northernmost of the widely scattered islands south of India -- most rising barely 5 feet above sea level -- but the southern islands remained "out of reach."

"The entire Maldives, I think, for a moment disappeared from the planet Earth," he said. "Some islands may have completely disappeared, we don't know yet. But all the islands have been affected."

India also was reeling from the aftermath of the quake and tsunamis. Press Trust of India, the government news agency, said at least 6,200 Indians were killed and more bodies were being recovered.

Along India's southeastern coast, several villages were swept away, and thousands of fishermen who were at sea when the waves thundered ashore have not returned.

Monday, grieving relatives buried or cremated their dead. Along the coast, brick foundations were all that remained of village homes.

In Tamil Nadu state, 2,500 people have been confirmed dead, and officials said 3,000 died on the remote Andaman and Nicobar islands, where dozens of aftershocks were centered.

Efforts to provide survivors with food and shelter were hampered by the overwhelming magnitude of the damage.

Thai authorities said at least 866 people were dead and hundreds missing along the country's west coast -- home to 40 percent of Thailand's $10 billion tourist industry.

Tourists described the shock of being on a paradise island one moment and swimming in a living hell the next.

John Irvine of Britain's ITN television was enjoying the beach Sunday morning and ran into his bungalow to get a camera. When he returned, he saw "this wall of water heading our way, and my wife screamed to me."

"She grabbed our daughter, and I looked frantically for my 5-year-old son," Irvine told CNN. "He was looking out to sea. He was mesmerized, hypnotized by the wall of water."

Irvine said he grabbed the boy and "ran as hard as I could."

"And then I could hear the rush behind me," he said. "I looked and I could see the wall of water coming towards us. ... The wave caught up with us ... and it washed us, I guess, another 50 yards into a mangrove swamp. We were very lucky not to be hit by all the debris that there was. I mean, it was carrying small boats with it, carrying logs, masonry. It was a terrifying experience."

The Thai government set up a tourist relief center and domestic relief centers.

Indonesia may have been the worst hit of all. Information from Aceh province -- closest to the epicenter, which was about 100 miles off the coast -- has been slow in coming because communications were cut off and because of a rebel insurgency based in the area.

On Monday evening, Vice President Muhammad Yusuf Kalla returned from a trip to the province's capital, Banda Aceh, and said the devastation there was much worse than expected and that the death toll could reach 5,000 to 10,000 in the capital alone.

At least 4,350 people are reported dead in Indonesia, officials said.

The government was arranging food, water and medicine for the shattered region and was staging relief efforts from Medan on the west coast. But the lack of communications in Banda Aceh was problematic.

Reports returned with the vice president that the city's infrastructure was wiped out and that military and police equipment was destroyed. The chief of police in Banda Aceh said 400 of his officers were killed in a police dormitory.

In the Maldives, 46 people are dead and more than 70 missing, according to Hassan Sobir, the Maldives high commissioner.

As far away as Somalia on Africa's east coast, there were reports of swimmers and fishermen being swept out to sea.

Among the dead are at least 61 from outside the region.

That number includes 13 Italians, 11 Britons, 10 Norwegians, 8 Americans, 6 Australians, 6 French, 4 Austrians, and 3 Danes, officials from those countries were reported by The Associated Press as saying, with hundreds more reported missing.

No warning
The tsunamis struck with no warning to those in coastal areas -- particularly Indonesia, so close to the source -- as no warning system exists for the Indian Ocean, said Eddie Bernard, director of the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Pacific Marine and Environmental Labs in Seattle, Washington.

Such tsunamis are much more common around the Pacific Rim than in the Indian Ocean.

"The damage is just phenomenal," said Jan Egelund, U.N. emergency relief coordinator. "I think we are seeing now one of the worst natural disasters ever."

There was disagreement over whether the threat was over.

Waverly Person of the U.S. Geological Survey's National Earthquake Information Center (NEIC) said the tsunamis are "long over" and residents and visitors should not worry about further tsunamis.

Bernard, however, said the aftershocks are strong enough to produce more tsunamis.

The quake represented the energy released from a rupture in the earth's crust more than 600 miles (1,000 kilometers) long, the NEIC said.

It was the strongest earthquake since 1964 and tied a 1952 quake in Kamchatka, Russia, as the fourth-strongest since such measurements began in 1899.

The quake hit a year after the 6.6-magnitude quake in Bam, Iran, which killed more than 30,000 people, injured another 30,000 and destroyed 85 percent of the buildings in the city.
Quote:
Thousands were missing, an estimated 1 million were displaced and an estimated 250,000 were homeless.

Quote:
People across Asia are flocking to makeshift morgues seeking lost loved ones after tsunamis swept across the Indian Ocean from Thailand to Somalia, killing more than 22,000 people.

Eeergh, that's fucked!


[CLICK HERE TO VIEW THIS PICTURE]


posted by hungarian kid
  



More articles related to the quake
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Killer quake rattled earth orbit: scientists
The earthquake that unleashed deadly tidal waves on Asia was so powerful it made the earth wobble on its axis and permanently altered the regional map, United States geophysicists said on Monday.

The quake registered 9.0 on the Richter scale and struck 250 kilometres south-east of Sumatra on Sunday.

According to one expert, it may have moved small islands as much as 20 metres.

"That earthquake has changed the map," US Geological Survey (USGS) expert Ken Hudnut told AFP.

"Based on seismic modelling, some of the smaller islands off the south-west coast of Sumatra may have moved to the south-west by about 20 metres. That is a lot of slip."

The north-western tip of the Indonesian territory of Sumatra may also have shifted to the south-west by around 36 metres, Mr Hudnut said.

In addition, the energy released as the two sides of the undersea fault slipped against each other made the earth wobble on its axis.

"We can detect very slight motions of the earth and I would expect that the earth wobbled in its orbit when the earthquake occurred, due the massive amount of energy exerted and the sudden shift in mass," Mr Hudnut said.

Another USGS research geophysicist agreed that the earth would have received a "little jog," and that the islands off Sumatra would have been moved by the quake.

However, Stuart Sipkin, of the USGS National Earthquake Information Centre in Golden Colorado, said it was more likely the islands off Sumatra had risen higher out of the sea.

"In in this case, the Indian plate dived below the Burma plate, causing uplift, so most of the motion to the islands would have been vertical, not horizontal."

The tsunamis unleashed by the fourth-biggest earthquake in a century have left at least 23,000 people dead in eight countries across Asia and as far as Somalia in East Africa.

The tsunamis wiped out entire coastal villages and sucked beach-goers out to sea.

The International Red Cross estimated that up to one million people have been displaced by the natural calamity.


This from ABC too
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Disease threatens tsunami-stricken countriesIndian Ocean states from Indonesia to Sri Lanka are scrambling to cope with the widespread devastation of tsunamis that have killed over 23,000 people and could claim more lives through disease and privation.

The United Nations said hundreds of relief planes packed with emergency goods would be heading for the region from some two dozen countries within the next 48-hours.

More than 23,700 have died and over one million people have been displaced in three of the south Asian countries hit by the towering waves, the International Red Cross (IRC) says.

The sheer scale of Sunday's disaster, however, is still unclear amid the chaos.

"The cost of the devastation will be in the billions of dollars," said Jan Egeland, head of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).

"However, we cannot fathom the cost of these poor societies and the nameless fishermen and fishing villages ... that have just been wiped out. Hundreds of thousands of livelihoods have gone."

Waves up to 10 metres high were triggered by the biggest earthquake in 40 years deep below the Indian Ocean, near the Indonesian island of Sumatra.

Western tourists were killed on beaches, fishing villages devastated, power and communications cut, and homes destroyed.

Sri Lanka appears to have been the worst hit with over 10,000 dead, along with India which has reported over 7,000 and Indonesia which has says up to 10,000 could be dead.

Dozens also perished as far away as Somalia, some 6,000 kilometres from the epicentre.

The total number of deaths recorded may rise considerably as rescue workers force their way to isolated communities.

The Finance Minister of India, where over 7,000 were killed, said late on Monday that contact had only just been restored with one of the worst-hit islands, Car Nicobar.

The death toll there was not known but would be "very large".

About 45,000 people live on the island that suffered aftershocks throughout Monday.

The UN said the disaster was unique in its experience in encompassing such a large area and so many countries.

It resonated, however, far beyond even these bounds, claiming the lives of many foreign tourists.

Australians, Britons, Danes, Swedes, Swiss, Italians and at least one New Zealander and an American were among the dead on the holiday island of Phuket, Thailand.

Throughout the region, homeless people fearing another wave have sheltered in public buildings, schools and on high ground. There was a shortage of clean water and provisions.

Weather officials in India warned of more high waves over the next day or two and urged people to stay away from the shoreline.

"Like a ripple, the tsunami will only die down gradually and so we expect more waves before they slowly subside," said S Sridharan, of the Meteorological Department's office in Chennai, capital of Tamil Nadu state, one of the worst-hit areas.

Those not searching for survivors hastened to bury the dead, often in mass graves, throughout the region.

Survivors face their greatest danger in the coming days.

"The biggest threat ... is from the spread of infection through contamination of drinking water and putrefying bodies left by receding waters," Jamie McGoldrick of the OCHA said in Geneva.

Mr Egeland said there could be epidemics of intestinal and lung infections within days unless health systems in the stricken countries get the help they need.

"Bigger waves have been recorded, but no wave has affected so many people in this way, because we have had a population explosion since the last tsunami, and some of these areas are among the most populated in the world."

Indonesian Vice-President Jusuf Kalla said the death toll could reach 10,000 in Aceh province alone.

As night fell dozens of bodies were still scattered on streets along with masses of debris - mud, mangled trucks and cars and the wreckage of houses - swept up to eight kilometres inland.

Leaders of the armed separatist Free Aceh Movement (GAM), fighting for independence for the oil and gas-rich western province since 1976, declared a unilateral cease-fire, saying it did not want to add to the chaos and confusion.


More
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Indonesian warns death toll could reach 25,000
The death toll in Indonesia from the weekend's devastating earthquake and tsunami could reach as high as 25,000, Vice-President Jusuf Kalla has said.

Mr Kalla, who is in charge of coordinating relief efforts says as many as 100,000 could be injured.

"Accurate data are not yet here, but I estimate 21,000 to 25,000 people," he told journalists in the city of Medan on Sumatra island, the state newsagency Antarta news agency said.

The confirmed death toll from Sunday's disaster, which caused massive destruction along the coastline of Sumatra's Aceh province, stood at 4,725, officials say.

However, there are wide areas of Aceh and neighbouring regions where no communication has been possible with the outside since the 9.0 magnitude quake struck the seabed just off Sumatra early on Sunday morning.

Some reports say as many as one million people live in those areas. Officials have warned the toll could increase dramatically, as contact is restored to coastal areas which have been cut off since powerful tidal waves charged ashore.

The International Red Cross, which has not taken Mr Kalla's death estimate into account, says the quake and tsunamis have killed more than 23,700 people in Indonesia, Sri Lanka, India, Thailand, Myanmar, Bangladesh, Malaysia, the Maldives, Somalia and Kenya.

Thousands more people remain missing in the aftermath of the world's strongest earthquake since 1964.


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Agency calls for more Aust tsunami aid
Australian aid agencies say the Federal Government's financial commitment to communities affected by the tsunamis is not enough.

The Government has announced a $10 million aid package, however the executive director of Oxfam Community Aid Abroad, Andrew Hewitt, says more financial support will be needed.

"It was a very good first step, $10 million is very important but the Prime Minister himself said more will be required," he said.

"More will be required in the short-term, but there will also be a need for a longer term commitment to help the countries concerned to recover from this crisis.

"It is of an unprecedented scale."

Meanwhile, he says Australian aid workers are helping retrieve and dispose of bodies in Sri Lanka.

Mr Hewitt says Australians are also helping to provide clean water, sanitation, food and shelter.

"We have a long standing presence in countries like Sri Lanka," he said.

"We have an office there and we have a network of local community organisations we've worked with for nearly 20 years, that's the core of our assistance.

"Those people know their communities but they need more support, more back up from Australia."



posted by hungarian kid
  



New York Times puts the death toll at 40,000 as of this morning. Sad

posted by Tiefling
  

50,000+



On the news just now the number is upto 50,000 and still rising Crying or Very sad

posted by zesja
  

60,000+



They also expect double that in the ensueing famine that will follow, this is truly tragic

posted by Crossfade
  

Must say...



...Just wanted to add my asshole comment to this thread that, if you feel tremors near the ocean and then see the oceans waves get sucked out to sea, DO NOT GO OUT TO SEE WHAT IS GOING ON! RUN, RUN, RUN IN THE OTHER DIRECTION!


posted by volonteshiva
  



Taken from
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Tsunami death toll tops 56,000

BANDA ACEH, Indonesia (CNN) -- The number of dead in Indonesia has risen five-fold to 27,174, almost doubling the death toll from the massive underwater earthquake and the equally massive tsunami that followed it.

The latest numbers, confirmed by the Ministry of Health in Jakarta on Wednesday, push the final toll from Sunday's catastrophe to over 56,000.

Officials could not reach some remote areas, like Indonesia's Aceh province, India's Andaman and Nicobar Islands and the Maldives, until Tuesday, and once there, they found scenes much worse than they imagined.

The "putrid stench of the dead" hung heavily Tuesday over Banda Aceh as officials slowly came to grips with the devastation.

The 9.0 magnitude earthquake struck off the western-most portion of Indonesia's northern Sumatra Island early on Sunday.

"The center of Banda Aceh has been absolutely devastated," said CNN's Mike Chinoy from the capital of Aceh province. "There are still bodies lying in the street."

As far away as Somalia on Africa's east coast, reports trickled in of fishermen swept out to sea and swimmers lost.

Jan Egeland of the United Nations said entire villages were swept away in Somalia, and Kenya television reporter Lillian Odera said "hundreds were killed" there.

In all, at least 12 countries -- including the Maldives, Myanmar, Malaysia, Bangladesh and Tanzania -- were affected by the monstrous waves.

Along with many private humanitarian aid groups, the United States, Australia, Germany, Japan and other nations have pledged relief to help victims throughout the region.

More than 18,000 of those confirmed dead were in Sri Lanka, where the giant waves swept a 1,000-passenger train off its tracks, and the dead and injured overwhelmed hospitals and medical workers.

"It's a huge situation, and there are instances where bodies are decomposing, and they're being photographed and fingerprinted" before being taken to mass graves, said Harim Peiris, spokesman for President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga.

"And there are instances where entire families have been wiped out."

Kumaratunga announced that Friday would be a national day of mourning.

Twelve trucks carrying rice, lentils and sugar left a U.N. World Food Program depot in the Sri Lankan capital of Colombo on Tuesday, headed to the country's southern and eastern coasts, The Associated Press reported.

The U.N. mission was also dispatching water bottles, bed sheets and cooking utensils, AP said.

Peiris said the most essential need at the moment was to keep people alive with cooked meals and clean drinking water -- and only later to begin rebuilding.

As aid began to arrive in several countries, families continued to flock to makeshift morgues seeking lost loved ones as more than a million people have been left homeless in Indonesia, India, Sri Lanka and Thailand.

Authorities across the region are running out of places to put the dead -- lining them up in schools and stacking them in the street -- as food aid and other supplies for survivors are making their way to affected areas.

The United Nations is asking donor countries to dig deeper, saying this will likely be the costliest natural disaster ever.

"People need help fast," said one man in Colombo, Sri Lanka, where flags were at half-staff.

"There's no power, there's no petrol, there's no movement, there's no support getting through to the injured, and I believe there are bodies that need to be identified and transported out of there. With this heat, sanitation problems will arise."

The United States has pledged to add an additional $20 million in aid for the disaster, to $15 million previously promised, the State Department announced Tuesday.

At the Pentagon, officials said plans are being worked out to dispatch Navy ships, supplies, helicopters, and hundreds of troops for humanitarian relief in Thailand.

The magnitude-9.0 quake struck about 7 a.m. Sunday (0000 GMT) and was centered about 160 kilometers (100 kilometers) off the coast of Indonesia's Sumatra island at a depth of about 10 kilometers (6.2 miles).

The tsunamis' paths left massive, indiscriminate destruction in areas that included some of the world's richest tourist sites and impoverished villages.

Most of the fatalities in Sri Lanka were in the eastern district of Batticaloa, authorities said.

The Sri Lankan government declared a state of emergency, and, along with the government of the Maldives, requested international assistance, the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs reported.

India also was reeling. Press Trust of India, the government news agency, said at least 9,500 Indians were killed and more bodies were being recovered.

Along India's southeastern coast, thousands of fishermen who were at sea when the waves thundered ashore have not returned.

Along the coast, brick foundations were all that remained of village homes.

In Tamil Nadu state, sources said 6,000 people were confirmed dead, and estimates put the death toll at 3,000 on the remote Andaman and Nicobar islands, where dozens of aftershocks were centered.

Asian government officials conceded Monday that they failed to issue public warnings that could have saved many lives.

In Thailand, authorities said at least 1,010 people were dead and hundreds missing along the country's west coast -- home to 40 percent of Thailand's $10 billion tourist industry.

Khun Poom Jensen, the 21-year-old autistic grandson of King Bhumibol Adulyadej, was among those killed.

One of the heaviest hit areas was Phuket, where 130 people were dead and as many as 600 people were believed to have been washed out to sea.

Many of the dead and missing are believed to be foreign nationals who were on the beach when the massive waves hit.

A total of 55 of non-nationals in the region have been reported killed, including 12 Americans, according to government figures.

One of the survivors was a 20-month-old Swedish boy who turned up in the Phuket International Hospital.

It was only after the news media published his photo that relatives in Europe contacted the hospital to identify him.




From
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US denies being 'stingy' with tsunami aid

The United States has pledged another $US20 million for victims of the Asian tsunami disaster, more than doubling its aid, while sharply rebuffing a suggestion it was "stingy".

The new assistance brought the total US commitment to $US35 million, which officials called an initial offering to help in the catastrophe that has claimed 55,000 lives and would likely require billions of dollars in aid.

The additional contribution was announced after Andrew Natsios, administrator of the US Agency for International Development (USAID), met with Secretary of State Colin Powell and his deputy Richard Armitage, on the crisis.

"They've identified an additional $US20 million to add to the $US15 million we've already pledged," said deputy State Department spokesman Adam Ereli.

Mr Powell earlier bristled at comments Monday by UN disaster relief coordinator Jan Egeland, who spoke of "stingy" rich nations reluctant to commit taxpayer resources to relief.

Mr Egeland said later his remarks had been misinterpreted.

"The United States is not stingy," Mr Powell told CNN during a round of US television interviews. He told ABC: "We will do more. I wish that comment hadn't been made."

Washington says it has given more aid in the last four years than any other nation or combination of nations in the world.

"We're busting our butts to help and comments like that don't reflect what we're doing," said one senior official, who asked not to be named.

The US military said it had diverted an aircraft carrier, other ships, at least 20 aircraft and thousands of sailors and marines to Asian countries struck by devastating tsunami waves.

The men and material were dispatched by US Pacific Command, with many of the aircraft heading for Thailand and Sri Lanka, two of the worst-hit countries.

"We have diverted the USS Abraham Lincoln carrier and its five ships. They left Hong Kong yesterday and they are en route to the Gulf of Thailand," said Major Guillermo Canedo, a Pacific Command spokesman in Hawaii.

He said the command had dispatched six Hercules C-130 cargo aircraft loaded with food and water.

The planes were loaded in Okinawa, Japan and are headed to Utaphao in Thailand.

Nine P3 aircraft have also been assigned to fly to Utaphao to help in the relief effort.

Five KC-135 Stratotanker aircraft, also filled with aid cargoes, are en route to Thailand and Sri Lanka, he said.

A senior UN official said the world body prepared an unprecedented appeal for relief funds, likely to exceed the $US1.6 billion dollars sought for Iraq last year.

Mr Powell put the tab in the billions of dollars and said his Government would do its part.

"Clearly the United States will be a major contributor to this international effort," he told NBC.

"Villages have been wiped out, schools wiped out, business places wiped out, but it will take a while to make sure we have a good understanding of what the needs are."

At least 12 Americans were confirmed dead in the tidal waves - seven in Sri Lanka and five in Thailand - with hundreds of others so far unaccounted for, officials said.

The $US20 million dollars in new US commitments came atop $US11 million in similar Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance funds approved Monday and $US4 million earmarked for the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

Mr Ereli said the latest assistance was akin to a line of credit to be disbursed to US missions and humanitarian groups dealing with the tidal waves triggered Sunday by a mammoth earthquake off Indonesia.

"Here's money available to be drawn upon to get equipment, to develop capacity, to provide supplies and relief to the people in need as those needs are identified," he told reporters here.

"We know the needs will be greater. This was a disaster of almost unimaginable dimension, and it's going to require massive support for some time," Mr Ereli said.


-

Exporter seeks supplies for tsunami relief plan
A livestock exporter from Albany in southern Western Australia wants to transport emergency supplies to tsunami-affected regions on the deck of a cattle ship which sets sail for Indonesia on New Year's Eve.

Geoff Davey says the ship will leave Geraldton for the port of Belawan in northern Sumatra.

He is pleading for help to stock it with up to 100 tonnes of supplies.

"Foods, mainly biscuits, canned food and milk powder, clothes ... blankets, tents and folding beds, medications, antibiotics and water refineries and generators," he said.

"Anything that comes into that category would be most helpful."


-
Adelaide doctors describe tsunami devastation
Two Adelaide doctors have told how they helped treat hundreds of people injured in the tsunami.

Luke and Angela Johnson were on their honeymoon on Krabi Island in Thailand when the tsunami hit.

They helped treat the hundreds of people being brought into hospitals, which have been stretched past their limits by the enormity of the tragedy.

Angela Johnson says some of the injuries suffered are horrific.

"The people had not only been caught in the waves but once the waves hit the foreshore and started destroying buildings there were sheets of corrogated iron, trees, wood from the boats all hitting people," Dr Johnston said.

"So massive lacerations, a lot of people with broken bones, a lot of people will lose limbs, that's how bad the lacerations were."


-
Concerns raised over speed of tsunami aid
World Vision Australia's Tim Costello says he is concerned by reports that aid supplies are not being distributed quickly enough in areas of Asia hit by the tsunami.

Australian aid agencies have established numerous appeals and some banks have set up accounts to help collect donations.

Australia has also offered to send public health officials to help prevent outbreaks of disease in devastated coastal areas.

Reverend Costello has arrived in Sri Lanka, where he will coordinate World Vision's long-term relief efforts.

He says more lives will be lost if the aid does not reach people.

"The death toll from the spread of water-borne diseases and lack of drinking water and lack of food can cost, let's hope not as many lives, but significant numbers so that's one thing I'll be certainly looking at," he said.

The head of UNICEF Australia says it may be easier to get aid to tsunami victims if the assistance effort is streamlined.

UNICEF's executive director, Carolyn Hardy, says while the process could be simpler, it is still early days.

"It's probably easier for people if there is one point to donate however at this stage it's in emergency," she said.

"Every agency is doing whatever they can to provide immediate assistance and UNICEF's sole focus at this point is children and their parents taking care of them, but predominantly children."

Clinical care

[i]An Australian team of health officials is being assembled and Victoria's chief health officer, Robert Hall, is one of the coordinators.

Dr Hall says food and water born diseases of all kinds can break out and mosquitos are also likely to be a problem.

He says there will be an assessment of need and clinical care is also likely to be offered.

"Australia has some experience with this because we assisted Papua New Guinea with its tsunami a couple of years back," he said.

"We've got some experience about what might be needed and then we are contributing on a national basis so all states are involved."

The Red Cross has begun working to try to identify and reunite injured and lost children with their parents.

Caroline Dunn leaves Australia for Indonesia today to work with the field assessment team.

She says hundreds of children were separated from their families when the waves hit.

"This will be a major challenge," she said.

"We have people on the ground with the Indonesian Red Cross already doing this and we will be attempting to trace the missing and link those people with family members if that's possible."


-
Sri Lanka buries its dead in mass graves
By Geoff Thompson in Galle and Reuters

Mass graves have been dug by heavy machinery near Galle in southern Sri Lanka, as the mounting number of dead raises fears of disease.

The Sri Lankan Government has lifted the official death toll from the worst tsunami in memory to nearly 22,000, while more than 65,000 are believed dead across Asia.

The stench of death in Galle is now forcing pedestrians to cover their noses and mouths when they walk the streets.

Nowhere is it as bad as in the hospitals, which have become makeshift morgues.

In one such place, 1,000 bodies have passed through.

Those who could be identified were handed over to families for burial.

Those who could not were photographed and finger-printed and carted off with others in a truck.

Scores were buried last night in mass graves, because it is not the dignity of the dead which most concerns authorities, but the need to prevent the other wave of death which a rapid spread of disease could bring.


-

Tsunami death toll nears 60,000

Tens of thousands more bodies have been found in the sea and wreckage of coastal towns around the Indian Ocean, pushing the death toll from Sunday's tsunami close to 60,000.

Many thousands more people were injured.

Governments and relief agencies have recovered thousands more corpses while trying to treat survivors and take care of millions left homeless, increasingly at threat from disease.

The United Nations has launched what it called an unprecedented relief effort to assist nations hit by the devastating tsunami, which was triggered by a magnitude 9.0 undersea earthquake off the Indonesian island of Sumatra.

A top World Health Organisation (WHO) official has warned that disease could kill as many people as those killed by the wall of water.

While grieving families in wrecked coastal towns and resorts buried their loved ones, others, including many foreign tourists, looked for friends and relatives still missing.

"Why did you do this to us, God?" wailed an old woman in a devastated fishing village in southern India's Tamil Nadu state. "What did we do to upset you? This is worse than death."

Paradise lost

In Thailand, where thousands of tourists were enjoying a Christmas break, many of the country's paradise resorts were turned into graveyards.

In a French-run hotel at Khao Lak on the Thai mainland north of the island of Phuket, up to half the 415 guests were believed killed.

A reporter from France's Europe 1 radio said many bodies had been found in their rooms.

"The Army is still bringing out bodies from the rooms because most of the tourists and staff of the hotel who were there were trapped by the wave, which completely swamped this hotel," reporter Anthony Dufour said.

Bekele Geleta, head of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) in South-East Asia, said: "The enormity of the disaster is unbelievable."

In Sri Lanka, hundreds of people were killed when the wave crashed into a train, wrecking eight carriages and uprooting the track it was travelling on.

The train was named 'Sea Queen'.

Surge of water

Of the overall death toll so far of 59,186, Indonesia has suffered the greatest number of victims, with its Health Ministry reporting 27,174 dead while Sri Lanka reported about 19,000 people killed.

India's toll of 11,500 included at least 7,000 on one archipelago, the Andamans and Nicobar.

On the island of Chowra in the Andaman and Nicobar islands, rescuers found only 500 survivors from 1,500 residents.

One hundred Air Force officers and their families vanished from one island base.

Hundreds of other people died in the Maldives, Myanmar and Malaysia.

The arc of water struck as far away as Somalia and Kenya in Africa.

Fishing villages, ports and resorts were devastated, power and communications cut and homes destroyed.

Aceh

In northern Indonesia's remote Aceh region, closest to the quake's epicentre, bodies littered the streets.

About 1,000 people lay on a sports field where they were killed when the three-storey-high tsunami struck.

"My son is crying for his mother," said Bejkhajorn Saithong, 39, searching for his wife at a wrecked hotel on the beach.

Body parts jutted from the wreckage.

"I think this is her," he said. "I recognise her hand but I'm not sure."

At the Thai holiday resort of Phuket, foreign tourists pored over names on hospital lists and peered at 80 hospital photos of unidentified bodies.

"My father was not there," said German yacht skipper Jerzy Chojnowski, who was looking for his 83-year-old father, missing since the tsunami struck. "My father was not a good swimmer."

Relief teams

Relief teams and rescuers have flown into the region from around the globe to help in what the United Nations says will be the biggest and costliest relief effort in its history.

Gerhard Berz, a top risk researcher at Munich Re, the world's largest reinsurer, estimated the economic cost of the devastation at more than $16.6 billion.

More than 20 countries have pledged emergency aid worth more than $77 million.

Several Asian nations have sent naval ships carrying supplies and doctors to devastated areas.

In Geneva, the WHO's David Nabarro said it was vital to rush medicine and fresh water to the worst-hit countries to prevent further catastrophe.

"There is certainly a chance that we could have as many dying from communicable diseases as from the tsunami," Dr Nabarro said.

There was a serious risk of an explosion of malaria and dengue fever, already endemic in South-East Asia, he said.

Around the ring of devastation, Sweden reported 1,500 citizens missing, the Czech Republic almost 400, Finland 200 and Italy and Germany 100.

Eight Australians are confirmed dead, with serious concerns held for 11 more.

The tremor off Indonesia was the biggest in 40 years and tore a chasm in the seabed. That launched the tsunami, which appears to be the deadliest in more than 200 years.

A tsunami at Krakatoa in 1883 killed 36,000 people and one in the south China Sea in 1782 killed 40,000, according to the National Geophysical Data Centre in the United States.



[CLICK HERE TO VIEW THIS PICTURE]
[CLICK HERE TO VIEW THIS PICTURE]


posted by hungarian kid
  



Aaah fucking hell, the death toll keeps going up!

-

Tsunami toll may top 100,000
The Red Cross says the death toll from one of the worst tsunamis in history could top 100,000, as more bodies are found from India to Indonesia.

Those who survived the tsunami are now grappling with thirst and disease.

Sunday's colossal seawater surge was triggered by an undersea earthquake off Indonesia which was so large it may have made the world wobble on its axis.

The head of operations support with the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, Peter Rees, says the federation currently puts the death toll from the tsunami at 77,828.

But he expects that to rise as the consequences in remote areas become clear.

"I would not be at all surprised that we will be on 100,000 [deaths] when we know what has happened on the [Indian] Andaman and Nicobar islands," Mr Rees said.

At least 10 people from Australia are among those killed.

Stricken coastal villages

In parts of India's Tamil Nadu state, officials gave up counting the dead in their hurry to bury them in mass graves.

The stench of death hung over stricken coastal villages.

The United Nations has mobilised its biggest relief operation amid fears that cholera and diarrhoea could worsen the death toll.

The World Health Organisation says 5 million people lack the essentials of food, water and sanitation to survive.

"There is no food here whatsoever. We need rice. We need petrol. We need medicine," said Vaiti Usman, an Indonesian woman in Indonesia's devastated Aceh province, where tens of thousands died.

"I haven't eaten in two days."

Inadequate relief

In many areas, health experts say the relief operation looks woefully inadequate with shortages of coffins, equipment and medicine.

Emergency workers are struggling with power outages, destroyed communications and badly damaged roads.

A harrowing race is on for relatives to find loved ones.

A Swedish boy on a family holiday to the Thai resort of Phuket was shown in one news photograph clutching a piece of paper. On it was scrawled: "Missing parents and 2 brothers."

"I have lost three brothers, four sisters, and my father is missing," wept 18-year-old Tamil fisherman Rajan Xavier.

Health experts have warned disease could kill as many people as the tsunami, as the full extent of the tragedy begins to unfold.

Communities wiped out

For Scandinavia and Germany, fond of Asia as a winter refuge, the tsunami has turned the tropical paradise into hell for hundreds of travellers.

More than 2,000 Scandinavians and about 1,000 Germans are still missing, a full three days after disaster struck.

At least 600 Italians are missing.

Primitive tribes on India's remote Andaman and Nicobar islands were running out of the coconuts they were living on, with whole communities wiped out.

Buddhist monks are handing out rice and curry to survivors in Sri Lanka and aircraft have dropped food to isolated Indonesian towns.

In Thailand, idyllic resorts were turned into graveyards.

Near Khao Lak beach, the smell of decaying bodies hung over a Thai Buddhist temple-turned morgue.

"We have only cloth to wrap the bodies in and our bare hands and machetes to retrieve the bodies," Surasit Kantipantukul, a Thai rescuer, said. "We want machinery and boats."

Some Thai officials said their lack of equipment was embarrassing.

"Our workers have only noses to smell for foul odours," Environment Minister Suwit Khunkitti said.

'I held my children as long as I could'

Survivors have told tragic tales of the moment the tsunami struck villages and resorts, sucking tourists into the sea, surging through buildings, sweeping away cars and smashing ships.

"The water was just too strong," said Surya Darmar, lying on an army cot in Indonesia's Banda Aceh with a broken leg.

"I held my children for as long as I could but they were swept away."

Children may account for up to a third of the dead, one aid official said.

In the midst of tragedy, there were also tales of luck.

A 14-month-old Swedish toddler was found wrapped in a blanket on a hill in Phuket, Thailand, by an American couple.

On Khao Lak, a two-year-old fisherman's son survived for more than two days after being swept into a treetop.

Indonesia has suffered the highest number of victims, with 45,268 known to be dead, although the toll could rise to 80,000 in Aceh alone, the province closest to the quake's epicentre.

Dead bodies and rubble

Troops and rescue crews reached the town of Meulaboh on Aceh's west coast, about 150km from the epicentre, to find dead bodies and rubble.

"Today so far 3,400 bodies have been found in Meulaboh. Eighty per cent of the buildings are wrecked," Chief Security Minister Widodo Adi Sutjipto said.

A senior UN official in Indonesia said the toll in Meulaboh could reach 40,000.

In the provincial capital, Banda Aceh, as much as 5 per cent of the 300,000 population is believed dead.

Shocked survivors wandered among the rubble in search of lost family.

"I have given up searching for their bodies," said Rohani Amad, 40, wiping her eyes with a black Muslim headscarf, days after two sisters and her 16-year-old daughter disappeared.

Washed away

In Sri Lanka, where the death toll has topped 22,400, Tamil Tiger rebels appealed for help as they dug mass graves.

Hambantota, a tourist haven on the south coast, was wiped out.

Sri Lankan Army soldiers were still pulling hundreds of bloated bodies out of the mangrove behind the town.

"The people were washed away and trapped in the roots," an officer said. "Only after time do they all come up."

Each new tide loosens hundreds more corpses to add to the more than 2,500 that were buried outside what remained of the town.

India's toll of nearly 7,000 is likely to rise sharply. Many of the dead were on the Andaman and Nicobar islands.

"When the waves came and it kept climbing higher and higher I knew God had meant us to die," said islander Augustine.

"But my child was there with me and I had to run. Jesus saved us."

Hope fades

More than 1,800 bodies were recovered from Khao Lak beach and more than 3,000 people may have died there.

More than 300 were killed on Phi Phi island, location of the film The Beach.

Bloated and decaying bodies washed ashore on the island as hopes of finding survivors amid the rubble faded.

"It's hard to tell which bodies are foreign because they are just unrecognisable," said French rescue volunteer Serge Barros.

DNA tests might be used to identify some victims.

Hundreds of people were killed in the Maldives, Burma and Malaysia.

The region has seen huge killer waves before, including one when Krakatoa erupted off southern Sumatra in 1883, but Indian Ocean countries have no tsunami warning system.

US President George W Bush said he would consider all requests for aid to afflicted countries.

-Reuters



posted by hungarian kid
  



Ah, article on the earthquake and waves!

Wave of terror
The massive tsunami that has killed tens of thousands across Asia began deep beneath the Indian Ocean, which washes against Australia, Asia and Africa.

About 250 kilometres off Sumatra's coast and 10 kilometres below the surface of the earth, the India, Burma and Australian tectonic plates meet.

Moved about six to 10 centimetres per year by convection currents in the molten rock under the Earth's crust, the plates grind slowly away at each other.

On December 26, that slow grind became a quick slide along 1,200 kilometres of plate boundary as the India plate subducted beneath the Burma sub-plate.

The massive rupture, known as a megathrust, caused an earthquake measuring 9 on the Richter scale.

It also caused the sea floor to lift 10 to 15 metres, displacing millions of tonnes of water.

The resulting waves spread out in all directions from the epicentre of the quake.

The waves raced across the open ocean at about 500 kilometres per hour.

At sea, they were only a few centimetres high.

But as the waves neared the shore they slowed to about 45 kilometres per hour and grew to a height of 10 metres.

Until then, the only clue for those on land that a tsunami was coming was a receding tide.

The wave crashed ashore, striking coasts closest to the epicentre first - Sumatra was the first to feel the brunt, just 30 minutes after the earthquake.

The force of the water destroyed buildings, moved cars and trucks, and drowned thousands.

The destruction was repeated across Asia, before the tsunami reached Africa.

More than six hours after the earthquake, the wave ravaged the coasts of Kenya, Somalia and Tanzania.

Previous destruction

The tsunami, althought the deadliest, is not the first to have affected the region.

In August 1976, an earthquake caused a wave that left 5,000 dead on the Filipino island of Mindanao.

Indonesia recorded 2,000 deaths on the island of Flores as several tidal waves swamped the area in 1992.

The waves can be triggered by earthquakes or volcanoes, and nations close to tectonic plates are particuarly vulnerable.

Dr Cvetan Sinadinovski, Duty Seismologist with Geoscience Australia, says the resulting waves from this earthquake were seen in Australia.

"A half-a-metre wave passed Cocos Island and caused abnormal tides and waves across north-west Australia," he said.

Map reshaped

Paul Tapponnier, head of the tectonics laboratory at the Institut de Physique du Globe (IPG), says this earthquake made the earth wobble on its axis and permanently changed the geology of the surrounding area.

He says it was like "flicking a top".

US Geological Survey geophysicist Ken Hudnut says the movement of the plates, which is thought to have been as much as 20 metres, also shifted islands such as Nicobar and Simeulue an unknown distance.

"That earthquake has changed the map," he said.

Mr Tapponnier says some regions of Sumatra south of the equator may have been completely swallowed up.

"Earthquakes are the architects of landscapes," he said.

"All the mountains that we see today have been modelled by earthquakes."



[CLICK HERE TO VIEW THIS PICTURE]


posted by hungarian kid
  

Total devastation











100000 deaths? Holy crap. That's the worst thing to happen since Hiroshima and Nagasaki.


posted by anonymyus
  

No wave songs



Reminds me of Blancmange - "Waves"
Quote:
It's just a wave passing over me.
What are these waves
they're comimg over me
it must be my destiny.
Waves
goodbye - goodbye - goodbye.
What are these waves
they're coming over me
it must be my destiny.

I heard they stopped to play "Wave" songs in the radio (songs dealing with waves) these days


posted by knn



ralph is in india isn't he? have we heard from him since? the last i read it is now above 120,000...

posted by The ONEder Man
  



Ergh, it's still going up!

-

Tsunami death toll tops 125,000

The death toll in the Indian Ocean tsunami disaster has soared above 125,000 as millions of survivors scramble for food and fresh water.

Aid agencies have warned that many more, from Indonesia to Sri Lanka, could die in epidemics if shattered communications and transport hamper what may prove history's biggest relief operation.

Rescue workers pressed on into isolated villages shattered by a disaster that could yet eclipse a cyclone that struck Bangladesh in 1991, killing 138,000 people.

Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi called for an emergency meeting of the Group of Eight so that the rich nations club could discuss aid and possible debt reduction following "the worst cataclysm of the modern era".

The total death toll shot up more than 50 per cent in a day, with still no clear picture of conditions in some isolated islands and villages around India and Indonesia.

While villagers and fishermen suffered devastation, losses among foreign tourists, essential to local economies, mounted.

Swedish Prime Minister Goran Persson said more than 1,000 of his countrymen and women may have been killed in the disaster.

Indonesian Health Ministry sources told Reuters that just under 80,000 people had died in the northern Aceh province that was close to the undersea quake which sparked the tsunami, about 28,000 more than previously announced.

Two sources said the toll would be officially announced soon.

Fastest get the food

The airport of Aceh's main city, Banda Aceh, was busy with aid flights but residents said little was reaching them.

Hungry crowds jostling for aid biscuits besieged those delivering them in the town. Some drivers dared not stop.

"Some cars come by and throw food like that. The fastest get the food, the strong one wins. The elderly and the injured don't get anything. We feel like dogs," said Usman, 43.

Residents of the city fled their homes when two aftershocks revived fresh memories of the worst earthquake in 40 years.

"I was sleeping but fled outside in panic. If I am going to die, I will die here. Just let it be," said Kaspian, 26.

Rumours, unfounded, of another tsunami swept along the seaboard of Sri Lanka and India, highlighting the continued tension across the stricken region four days after the quake.

The Indian Government issued a precautionary alert for all areas hit by the weekend's killer wave.

Police sirens blared on beaches in Tamil Nadu, one of the worst hit states in a country that has lost 13,000, as thousands streamed inland on foot or crammed any vehicle they could find. "Waves are coming, waves are coming," some shouted.

This time, however, the waves did not come.

There were similar scenes in Sri Lanka, where over 27,000 have been killed.

Thousands fled inland from the eastern coast.

Rebuilt from the ground up

"This isn't just a situation of giving out food and water. Entire towns and villages need to be rebuilt from the ground up," said Rod Volway of CARE Canada, whose emergency team was one of the first into Aceh.

The world pledged $US220 million in cash and sent a flotilla of ships and aircraft laden with supplies.

"As many as 5 million people are not able to access what they need for living," said David Nabarro, head of a World Health Organisation (WHO) crisis team.

Many villages and resorts are now mud-covered rubble, after the 9.0 magnitude quake.

Tourists were among those caught by surprise. Nearly 5,000 foreigners - half from Sweden and Germany - are missing, many in Thailand, where 710 foreigners have been confirmed dead.

Authorities warned of many deaths from dysentery, cholera and typhoid fever caused by contaminated food and water, and malaria and dengue fever carried by mosquitoes.

Indonesian aircraft dropped food to isolated areas in Aceh on northern Sumatra, an island the size of Florida - areas that may not be reached by land for days.

In Sri Lanka's worst-hit area Ampara, residents ran things themselves, going around with loudhailers, asking people to donate pots and pans, buckets of fresh water and sarongs.

"Frustration will be growing in the days and the weeks ahead," said UN emergency relief coordinator Jan Egeland.

The United Nations prepared what could be its largest appeal for donations to cope with its biggest relief effort.

The United States said a pledge of $US35 million was just a start, and sent an aircraft carrier group towards Sumatra and other ships including a helicopter carrier to the Bay of Bengal.

Financial costs, estimated at up to $US14 billion, are tiny relative to the human suffering.

By comparison, Hurricane Andrew killed 50 people in 1992 but, with much of the damage in the United States, cost around $US30 billion.

In the Thai resort turned graveyard of Khao Lak, the grim task of retrieving bodies was interrupted briefly when a tremor cleared the beach of people in a flash.

Dutch, German and Swiss forensic teams flew to Thailand to help identify now hard to recognise bodies by collecting dental evidence, DNA samples, fingerprints, photographs and X-rays.

Preserving bodies was an urgent need and Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra promised to provide refrigerated containers.

In northern Sri Lanka, survivors recovering corpses faced a new danger - floating landmines from a long-running conflict.



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posted by hungarian kid
  



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