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Tsunami Death Toll Soars Past 77,000
Caspar Star Tribune Wyoming's State Wide Newspaper ^ | December 29, 2004 | CHRIS BRUMMITT

Posted on 12/29/2004 7:31:04 PM PST by bd476

Tsunami Death Toll Soars Past 77,000

By CHRIS BRUMMITT

BANDA ACEH, Indonesia - "As the world scrambled to the rescue, survivors fought over packs of noodles in quake-stricken Indonesian streets Wednesday while relief supplies piled up at the airport for lack of cars, gas or passable roads to move them. The official death toll across 11 countries soared past 77,000 and the Red Cross predicted it could exceed 100,000.

Bodies were piled into mass graves in the belief that burial would ward off disease. Paramedics in southern India began vaccinating thousands of survivors against cholera, typhoid, hepatitis A and dysentery, and authorities sprayed bleaching powder on beaches where bodies have been recovered. In Sri Lanka, reports of waterborne disease such as diarrhea caused fears of an epidemic.

President Bush announced the United States, India, Australia and Japan have formed an international coalition to coordinate relief and reconstruction of the 3,000 miles of Indian Ocean rim walloped by Sunday's earthquake and the tsunami it unleashed.

"We're facing a disaster of unprecedented proportion in nature," said Simon Missiri, a top Red Cross official. "We're talking about a staggering death toll."

On hundreds of Web sites, the messages were brief but poignant: "Missing: Christina Blomee in Khao Lak," or simply, "Where are you?" All conveyed the aching desperation of people the world over whose friends and family went off in search of holiday-season sun and sand and haven't been heard from for four days.

But even as hope for the missing dwindled, survivors continued to turn up Wednesday. In Sri Lanka, where more than 22,000 died, a lone fisherman named Sini Mohammed Sarfudeen was rescued by an air force helicopter crew after clinging to his wave-tossed boat for three days.

Indian air force planes evacuated thousands of survivors from the remote island of Car Nicobar. Some of them had walked for days from their destroyed villages to reach a devastated but functioning airfield, where they were shuttled out 80 to 90 at a time.

Journalists were not allowed to leave the base to verify reports that some 8,000 people were dead there, but at the base alone, 67 officers and their families were missing and feared dead.

India's death toll rose to nearly 7,000, while Indonesia's stood at 45,268, but authorities said this did not include a full count from Sumatra's west coast, where more than 10,000 deaths were suspected in one town alone.

In Sumatra, the Florida-sized Indonesian island close to the epicenter of the quake, the view from the air was of whole villages ripped apart, covered in mud and seawater. In one of the few signs of life, a handful of desperate people scavenged a beach for food. On the streets of Banda Aceh, the main town of Sumatra's Aceh province, the military managed to drop supplies from vehicles and fights broke out over packs of instant noodles.

Maj. Gen. Endang Suwarya, military commander of Aceh province, said after flying over the stricken region that 75 percent of the west coast of Sumatra was destroyed.

Footage shot by an Associated Press Television News cameraman on the military helicopter showed town after town covered in mud and sea water. Homes had their roofs ripped off or were flattened.

A solitary mosque and green treetops were all that broke the line of water in one town.

With tens of thousands of people still missing across the entire region, Peter Ress, Red Cross operations support chief, said the death toll could top 100,000. More than 500,000 were reported injured.

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

The State Department said 12 Americans died in the disaster _ seven in Sri Lanka and five in Thailand. About 2,000 to 3,000 Americans were unaccounted for.

Bush, at his ranch in Crawford, Texas, talked by phone Wednesday with leaders of Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Thailand and India.

"We're still in the stage of immediate help. But slowly but surely, the size of the problem will become known, particularly when it comes to rebuilding infrastructure and community to help these affected parts of the world get back up on their feet," Bush said afterward.

The Pentagon says it will divert several U.S. warships and helicopters to the region, some of which can produce up to 90,000 gallons of drinking water a day.

Without clean water, respiratory and waterborne diseases could break out within days, putting millions at "grave risk," the U.N. children's agency said. "Standing water can be just as deadly as moving water," said UNICEF Executive Director Carol Bellamy. "The floods have contaminated the water systems, leaving people with little choice but to use unclean surface water."

Near Banda Aceh, trucks dumped more than 1,000 bloated, unidentified bodies into pits. Military Col. Achmad Yani Basuki said there was no choice, given the danger of disease and the difficulty of identifying any of the dead.

But Dana Van Alphan of the Pan American Health Organization issued a statement declaring there was no danger of corpses contaminating water or soil because bacteria and viruses cannot survive in dead bodies. The organization said it issued the statement, hoping to avert mass burials of tens of thousands of unidentified victims.

Van Alphan said it was important for survivors to be allowed to identify loved ones and urged authorities in tsunami-stricken countries to avoid burying unidentified corpses in mass graves.

"I think that psychologically, people have to be given the chance to identify their family members," she said. "Whatever disease the person has while still alive poses no threat to public health in a corpse."

The World Health Organization has also said dead bodies are not an immedieate threat to health.

"The health hazard associated with dead bodies is negligible. The collection, disposal, burying and/or cremation of corpses requires important human and material resources which should instead be allocated to those who survived and remain in critical condition," the organization said in a news release after the 1999 earthquake in Turkey.

Thailand said it had more than 1,800 dead and a total of more than 300 were killed in Malaysia, Myanmar, Bangladesh, the Maldives, Somalia, Tanzania and Kenya.

In Sri Lanka, four planes arrived in the capital bringing a mobile hospital from Finland, a water purification plant from Germany, doctors and medicine from Japan and aid workers from Britain, the Red Cross said.

Supplies that included 175 tons of rice and 100 doctors reached Banda Aceh but officials said they were having difficulty moving it out.

Widespread looting was reported in Thailand's devastated resort islands of Phuket and Phi Phi, where European and Australian tourists left valuables behind in wrecked hotels when they fled _ or were swept away.

An international airlift was under way to ferry critical aid and medicine to Phuket and to take home travelers, some with nothing but the clothes they were wearing. France, Australia, Greece, Italy, Germany and Sweden were sending flights.

The world's biggest reinsurer, Germany's Munich Re, estimated the damage to buildings and foundations in the affected regions would be at least $13.6 billion."

Associated Press reporters Lely Djuhari in Banda Aceh, Manish Swarup in Car Nicobar, India, Dilip Ganguly in Colombo, Sri Lanka, and Alisa Tang in Phuket, Thailand contributed to this report.



TOPICS: Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: deathtoll; earthquake; sumatraquake; tsunami
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1 posted on 12/29/2004 7:31:04 PM PST by bd476
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To: bd476

Why is now rich China giving so little relief? Are they too busy building up their military? Why?


2 posted on 12/29/2004 7:32:14 PM PST by FreeAtlanta (never surrender, this is for the kids)
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To: bd476
Bodies were piled into mass graves in the belief that burial would ward off disease. ... But Dana Van Alphan of the Pan American Health Organization issued a statement declaring there was no danger of corpses contaminating water or soil because bacteria and viruses cannot survive in dead bodies. The organization said it issued the statement, hoping to avert mass burials of tens of thousands of unidentified victims.

Van Alphan said it was important for survivors to be allowed to identify loved ones and urged authorities in tsunami-stricken countries to avoid burying unidentified corpses in mass graves.

"I think that psychologically, people have to be given the chance to identify their family members," she said. "Whatever disease the person has while still alive poses no threat to public health in a corpse." The World Health Organization has also said dead bodies are not an immedieate threat to health.

"The health hazard associated with dead bodies is negligible. The collection, disposal, burying and/or cremation of corpses requires important human and material resources which should instead be allocated to those who survived and remain in critical condition," the organization said in a news release after the 1999 earthquake in Turkey. "

Botulism. Flies, and fly-borne diseases. Ar these people out of their minds. Clearly the world's elite wants to ID the bodies of the elite, but why do they risk the lifes of the poor, the greiving and ruined to do so?
3 posted on 12/29/2004 7:39:21 PM PST by bvw
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To: bd476
"...But Dana Van Alphan of the Pan American Health Organization issued a statement declaring there was no danger of corpses contaminating water or soil because bacteria and viruses cannot survive in dead bodies. The organization said it issued the statement, hoping to avert mass burials of tens of thousands of unidentified victims.

Van Alphan said it was important for survivors to be allowed to identify loved ones and urged authorities in tsunami-stricken countries to avoid burying unidentified corpses in mass graves.

"I think that psychologically, people have to be given the chance to identify their family members," she said. "Whatever disease the person has while still alive poses no threat to public health in a corpse."

The World Health Organization has also said dead bodies are not an immedieate threat to health.

"The health hazard associated with dead bodies is negligible. The collection, disposal, burying and/or cremation of corpses requires important human and material resources which should instead be allocated to those who survived and remain in critical condition," the organization said in a news release after the 1999 earthquake in Turkey..."

* * * * * * *

This will impose at the very least, a great assault upon the senses of those heading over there to help in recovery efforts.

4 posted on 12/29/2004 7:40:28 PM PST by bd476
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To: FreeAtlanta

5 posted on 12/29/2004 7:40:35 PM PST by pure_capitalist (Proud Supporter of www.clubforgrowth.org)
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To: bvw
BVW said: "Botulism. Flies, and fly-borne diseases. Ar these people out of their minds. Clearly the world's elite wants to ID the bodies of the elite, but why do they risk the lifes of the poor, the greiving and ruined to do so?"

Botulism would be a stretch, but cholera, dysentery, typhoid fever, the plague, massive staph, tetanus, strep and E. coli infections along with every horrific illness known to man would seem to be at high risk here.

Also "elite" loss of life, that is if you are referring to wealthier Western vacationers, is far less than the poor.

6 posted on 12/29/2004 7:52:00 PM PST by bd476
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To: pure_capitalist
This is an awful catastrophe. I think I understand your point, but at the same time, I was shocked at the tiny 2.4 million that China had offered. This is their neighborhood, and yet, we get criticized for not giving enough.China is now sending astronauts into space!!! They have wealth, where is their compassion?
7 posted on 12/29/2004 7:52:02 PM PST by FreeAtlanta (never surrender, this is for the kids)
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To: FreeAtlanta

The Chinese government only cares about receiving FDI...


8 posted on 12/29/2004 7:52:33 PM PST by Kurt_D
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To: bd476

Just out of curiosity, how are they coming up with the 'death count'? Are they counting actual bodies? Lists of missing? Empty towns?


9 posted on 12/29/2004 7:55:00 PM PST by eccentric (aka baldwidow)
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To: FreeAtlanta
"Why is now rich China giving so little relief? Are they too busy building up their military? Why?"

Why? Because we have befriended and embraced a country which does not view friendship as a reciprocal relationship. China is a narcissistic country with narcissistic leaders. International relations is all about China. China is for and about China.

10 posted on 12/29/2004 7:57:27 PM PST by bd476
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Comment #11 Removed by Moderator

To: FreeAtlanta
. . . I was shocked at the tiny 2.4 million that China had offered . . . They have wealth, where is their compassion?

China may not be as wealthy as you might think.  Read between the lines in this excerpt from a Bloomberg story.  The pressure is on.  If the Chinese don't respond, it is because they can't.

. . . China's response. It's no mystery that Beijing wants to boost ties here in Asia. The devastation from last weekend's tsunamis is a perfect chance for China to go further in selling its economy as a modern, benevolent one.

Yet China may have to do more than donate 21.63 million renminbi ($2.6 million) in disaster relief and send emergency search and rescue experts to the region. While it's a generous offer in light of China's challenges, this is an opportunity for China to score big points with neighbors. Will it rise to the occasion?

12 posted on 12/29/2004 7:58:24 PM PST by Racehorse
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To: FreeAtlanta
Why is now rich China giving so little relief? Are they too busy building up their military? Why?

I am curious to know how much countries like Saudi Arabi abd Kuwait have offered.

13 posted on 12/29/2004 8:13:20 PM PST by boycott
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To: planet terry
was 12/26 worse than 9/11?

Well, according to the title of the thread, the death toll was at least 2,500% higher.

14 posted on 12/29/2004 8:13:40 PM PST by SedVictaCatoni (<><)
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To: planet terry
Hi Planet Terry. Welcome to Free Republic. I hope you have a pleasant stay.

Before you begin incorrectly attacking me or any other posters for that matter, won't you please use correct English punctuation and then introduce yourself.

planet terry said: "every nation has offered very little relief compared to the size of this disaster. the left will say 35 million from the USA pays for 4 hours of Iraq occupation. "

Is that what you and your leftist pals believe Terry?

Why don't you ask your friends in Al Quada what they plan to contribute. Bombs, biological and chemical warfare would not really help much, Terry.

What amount of money will you demand your Islamofascist pals contribute, Terry?

When do you plan on taking your high school equivalency exam?

planet terry said: "why have u printed a picture with all the dead bodies? "

You are mistaken. I did not print nor post it.

Why don't you write to the online publications which printed the picture, or better, contribute and help, rather than trolling this informative American website.

15 posted on 12/29/2004 8:14:04 PM PST by bd476
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To: eccentric

That's a good question, Eccentric.


16 posted on 12/29/2004 8:15:00 PM PST by bd476
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To: bd476

Just cause I'm eccentric, don't mean I'm stupid. :)


17 posted on 12/29/2004 8:17:07 PM PST by eccentric (aka baldwidow)
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To: onyx; Hildy; Howlin

Please welcome a new one.


18 posted on 12/29/2004 8:17:45 PM PST by bd476
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To: planet terry
was 12/26 worse than 9/11?

Which of these could have been prevented?

19 posted on 12/29/2004 8:21:10 PM PST by woofie (Proudly posting inane comments since 1998)
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To: planet terry

Please, watch your head and step while disembarking.


20 posted on 12/29/2004 8:22:35 PM PST by getmeouttaPalmBeachCounty_FL
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