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Thousands stranded beyond hope (100,000 people on island near epicenter still unaccounted for)
Sydney Morning Herald ^ | December 29, 2004 | Lindsay Murdoch in Banda Aceh and Sean Nicholls

Posted on 12/28/2004 8:14:26 AM PST by dead

The survivors have blank stares and do not speak. We walk together among black and bloated bodies still lying in the streets of Banda Aceh three days after the 25 minutes of terror that struck on Boxing Day morning.

"We thought it was the end of the world," says Sofyan Halim, who lost 15 members of his family.

Banda Aceh's 40,000 people have suffered greatly over the years, caught in a bitter fight between the Indonesian military and rebels struggling for independence from Jakarta. But nothing like this; never before such death and utter devastation.

Nobody here is talking about recovery, just survival.

This is just a slice of the devastation wreaked across 11 nations by an earthquake and resulting tsunami. The rescue mission here is painfully slow, just as it is in most of the stricken areas.

Only a 16-hour boat ride away, close to the epicentre of the earthquake, is an island of 100,000 people - all of them unaccounted for and beyond the reach of Indonesia's limited resources.

"We just don't know about them," a government official, Djoko Sumaryono, says of Simeulue. "No contact makes us fearful. We're trying to send helicopters there."

An Australian trying to reach Simeulue yesterday with vital aid and a satellite phone also fears the worst. "There will be people there with nothing, no fuel, no food, no water, nothing at all. The whole place is washed away I'd say," Brian Williams says.

Among the ruins of what used to be Banda Aceh's thriving market, shocked men and boys pick through the rubble, ignoring dozens, perhaps hundreds, of rotting bodies.

When the stink becomes unbearable, they cover their faces and continue their search for anything that will keep their families alive. Food is desperately short, so much so that people stand for hours in the sun outside the few shops untouched by the devastation in the hope they will open and sell them food.

Looting and lawlessness are other problems plaguing the region, but there are by no means the worst. The head of Banda Aceh's military hospital, Taufiq Urahman, says there are grave fears of an outbreak of cholera and typhoid. "Banda Aceh is paralysed," he says. "This is a very grim situation."

Survivors say the city was shaken first by two earthquakes, five minutes apart. Three tsunamis came 25 minutes later.

"The water was as high as a coconut palm," says Sofyan Halim. "All the debris came with it. People were screaming. Some got away, many didn't. The water went 15 kilometres inland in some places. It was all over in 25 minutes. That's all. How can that be ... such devastation."

It is difficult to imagine how Banda Aceh can rebuild itself. Trees, uprooted and dumped kilometres away, litter the streets, as do the twisted shells of cars. Layers of stinking mud cover everything and several of the biggest shopping centres have collapsed. Even the symbol of Aceh, the Baiturrahman mosque, has been badly damaged.

One of the many ruins, the three-storey Doctor Zainal Abidin Hospital, tells a particularly grim tale. "Children in emergency wards were killed [when the water hit]," says a nurse, Citra Nurhayat. "Soldier patients suffering from malaria helped to evacuate other patients."

Families sit in shock in the street or in the grounds of mosques. Only the children seem to cry; the parents seem numb with disbelief.

A 34-year-old mother, Nurhayati, says she has only had bananas to feed her three-month-old baby since Sunday. "I need baby food as well ... no aid has come to us yet."

Scores of badly injured people lie in the corridors and on verandahs of the only operating hospital in Banda Aceh. Patients have no water to drink and have only dry packed noodles to eat.

Saripah, 60, who could not hang on to her six-year-old granddaughter in the tsunami, came to the hospital yesterday for medicine. She was turned away. Outside was a 16-year-old girl who lost an entire family. She had been told there was nowhere to treat her leg wound. Nurses say there are thousands like them.

Survivors and rescue workers bring the dead to Lambaro, a village a few kilometres outside the city, and lay them under plastic sheets near a roundabout in the hope that relatives will come and identify them.

But the threat of disease and Muslim tradition that the dead be buried within 24 hours have prompted mass burials.

About 1500 victims, many of them children, were buried after a funeral on Monday night. There are so many bodies - officials say the death toll in Banda Aceh alone may be as high as 10,000 - that an excavator is digging graves on a two-hectare plot of land near the village.

Indonesian officials fear that communities and islands off the west coast of Sumatra may have been even harder hit.

Shortages of food, water and medicines in Banda Aceh are already causing anger among the Acehnese. Indra Utama, a community leader in the city, says the military must provide more urgent aid. "Where is the military?" he asks. "They're just taking care of their families. There is no war in Aceh now, why don't they help pick up the bodies in the street?"

However, the Indonesian military has started flying medical crews and badly needed emergency supplies into the area in Hercules and any other available aircraft from Medan. It admits much more is needed. At an emergency aid centre at the Banda Aceh parliament only biscuits and drinking water had arrived yesterday afternoon.

Brian Williams, who has lived on Simeulue since 2002, yesterday flew into Medan from Sydney with his wife, Dewi.

He is desperate to contact the island, where he runs a surfing and fishing tour business, but communications are down.

He believes the main town, Sinabang, has been "wiped out".

Mr Williams plans to make the 16-hour trip to Simeulue on a boat laden with Australian aid. "I just want to make sure they're all right and get them some help."


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: sumatraquake; tsunami
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To: anyone

Just curious....are these mostly Muslim countries that were hit by this? During Christmas season?


121 posted on 12/28/2004 6:05:17 PM PST by benice (http://www.theinterviewwithgod.com/windowmovie2.html)
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To: soccer_linux_mozilla

How does one even begin to get one's mind around THIS? I am so... I don't even know. There are no words. God help the living.


122 posted on 12/28/2004 6:11:48 PM PST by Danae (Dip bullets in Pig fat. Terrorist Kryptonite.)
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To: Types_with_Fist

World's Most Fatal Earthquakes / Tsunamis

Date Location Deaths Magnitude Comments
January 23, 1556 China, Shansi 830,000 ~8
July 27, 1976 China, Tangshan 255,000 (official) 7.5 Estimated death toll as high as 655,000.
August 9, 1138 Syria, Aleppo 230,000
May 22, 1927 China, near Xining 200,000 7.9 Large fractures.
December 22, 856+ Iran, Damghan 200,000
December 16, 1920 China, Gansu 200,000 8.6 Major fractures, landslides.
March 23, 893+ Iran, Ardabil 150,000
September 1, 1923 Japan, Kwanto 143,000 7.9 Great Tokyo fire.
October 5, 1948 USSR (Turkmenistan, Ashgabat) 110,000 7.3
December 28, 1908 Italy, Messina 70,000 to 100,000 (estimated) 7.2 Deaths from earthquake and tsunami.
September, 1290 China, Chihli 100,000

Source: USGS

123 posted on 12/28/2004 6:42:19 PM PST by reg45
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To: vaudine

Not to worry.


124 posted on 12/28/2004 8:13:13 PM PST by Concentrate
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To: William Tell

i am appaled at all this talk about giving cash to charities
if we did not give to help our neighbours anywhere in world we would not be human did not jesus help the poor an starving i give to red cross an i feel i make a contribution to the aid of mankind


125 posted on 01/09/2005 5:01:21 AM PST by ca48
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