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US Military Sees Its Tsunami Work Winding Down (update)
Yahoo News ^ | 1/15/05 | Karima Anjani, Jerry Norton

Posted on 01/15/2005 5:57:30 PM PST by Libloather

US Military Sees Its Tsunami Work Winding Down
Sat Jan 15, 5:10 PM ET
By Karima Anjani and Jerry Norton

BANDA ACEH, Indonesia (Reuters) - The U.S. military, a leading force behind relief efforts in tsunami-hit nations, said on Saturday it expected to end major work in Thailand and Sri Lanka within two weeks but to stay longer in Indonesia.

More shopping markets reopened, fishermen received new boats and even the sea was given a clean-up as people in the Indian Ocean region set about repairing the damage from the Dec. 26 tsunami and restoring normal life.

U.S. Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz flew over Indonesia's worst-hit Aceh province, where the tsunami killed about two-thirds of the total global death toll of more than 162,000, and told reporters he was shocked at the devastation.

"I thought I was prepared for it, and I honestly wasn't -- the enormous extent of it, the complete desolation," he said.

U.S. military commanders briefed Wolfowitz, saying Thailand and Sri Lanka would soon be able to cope on their own.

"We see ourselves in a position to make that transition in a week or two," Lieutenant General Robert Blackman told Wolfowitz at U-tapao Royal Thai Naval base south of Bangkok.

Officers said it would take slightly longer in Indonesia.

The United States has deployed some 15,000 servicemen, ships and helicopters to deliver emergency aid to tsunami-ravaged countries round the Indian Ocean, mostly to Aceh.

Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim country, is sensitive about having a large multinational military presence in Aceh, an area riven by a separatist conflict, and wants U.S., Japanese, Australian and other forces to leave by April.

JAKARTA DEADLINE

Wolfowitz, U.S. ambassador to Indonesia in the late 1980s, said Washington had no problem with Jakarta setting a deadline because it was a goal to take over all aid work.

"We don't have a plan other than to (work) as quickly as we can to hand over responsibility to others, and especially to the Indonesian government," he said. "Our goal is to put ourselves out of business as quickly as possible."

U.N. officials say U.S. helicopters have been vital in getting aid to remote areas where the tsunami washed away roads, bridges and airstrips. Washington views aid efforts as essential to its war against terrorism and regional security in Asia.

Wolfowitz, due to meet President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and other Indonesian officials on Sunday, said he hoped the goodwill shown in helping tsunami victims would reap some political capital.

In Aceh's capital Banda Aceh, aftershocks shook houses, sending residents fleeing their homes yet again.

Some 3,000 tsunami survivors are being hired for $3.30 a day to clean up rubble in the city under a U.N.-funded program.

The U.N. refugee agency is distributing thousands of tents, mostly on Aceh's northwest coast. But aid workers say relatively few of the 700,000 displaced in Aceh live like refugees as most turn to extended families.

In Sri Lanka, where 30,000 were killed by the tsunami, the government signaled reconstruction was under way by handing 60 modest fiberglass boats to fishermen.

There are plans to replace half of the estimated 18,500 vessels washed away or smashed to pieces by tsunami.

SELF HELP

Others tried to help themselves. Some fishermen patched up their boats and farmers worked to stop their land being damaged by the tsunami's salt water.

U.N. staff say there is no sign of diseases breaking out in tsunami-hit countries that also include India, Malaysia, the Maldives, Bangladesh, Myanmar and East African states.

On India's Andaman and Nicobar islands traumatized survivors were given counseling to deal with what they lived through.

A hush descended among dozens of people huddled on plastic sheets in one camp for the homeless as a relief worker shouted into a microphone.

"If you can't sleep at night or are fearful of loud noises that remind you of the tsunami, there is help," the worker said. "Doctors are here to help you. Come to the medical room."

Within minutes, men, women and children had crowded into a classroom where mental health doctors were on hand.

"My son gets scared very easily after the tsunami. He hardly speaks anymore and is always holding my arm," schoolteacher Swaran Rekha told one doctor of her 6-year-old.

The remote island chain includes stone-age tribes, some of whom believe a giant boar-like animal sleeping below them has been turning on its sides and caused the earthquake off Indonesia that triggered the tsunami.

"Some people are saying these are the last days of the world," said one refugee, declining to be named.

In Thailand, where many foreign tourists were among the 5,300 dead, around 300 volunteer divers scoured the sea floor and prized coral reefs to clear debris around Phuket island so tourism can restart.

Two Buddhist monks sailed out to bless the divers and pray for peace for the spirits of the dead.

U.N. environment chief Klaus Toepfer said an international disaster reduction conference in Japan next week should forge an agreement on a tsunami early warning system for the Indian Ocean region.

The meeting should also outline how the system could be extended to all seas and oceans across the globe and to all forms of natural and man-made disasters, he said.

"We must ensure that the proposed Indian Ocean early-warning system does not ... simply lie on the shelf gathering dust," said Toepfer, head of the United Nations Environment Program.

(For more news on emergency relief from Reuters AlertNet visit http://www.alertnet.org email: alertnet@reuters.com; +44 20 7542 2432)


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: down; its; military; sees; tsunami; update; us; winding; work
Two Buddhist monks sailed out to bless the divers and pray for peace for the spirits of the dead.

Attempt a few more flyovers and get out. I'm sure the Chicoms will pick up the pieces...

1 posted on 01/15/2005 5:57:33 PM PST by Libloather
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To: Libloather
Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim country, is sensitive about having a large multinational military presence in Aceh, an area riven by a separatist conflict, and wants U.S., Japanese, Australian and other forces to leave by April.

Sensitive are they? I say we accomodate them and LEAVE NOW. Why wait for April?

Ignorant fools.

2 posted on 01/15/2005 6:10:55 PM PST by PLK
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To: PLK

We should leave now...and they are fools. The entire response of the U.S. (and its real allies) shows not only the greatness of our nations, but our commitment to mankind.

Let the losers of the world chart their own course.

God bless America and its real friends.


3 posted on 01/15/2005 6:21:13 PM PST by EagleUSA
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To: EagleUSA

It's good to hear that they are trying to help themselves, and I think three months ought to get them well on the way to rebuilding their huts and patching their boats up. Then the NGOs can take over from there. We don't want to make them a protectorate or anything.

As for rebuilding "infrastructure" they didn't have any to begin with. Let the UN provide it if they think anything is needed.


4 posted on 01/15/2005 7:31:18 PM PST by KateatRFM
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To: Libloather
said on Saturday it expected to end major work in Thailand and Sri Lanka within two weeks but to stay longer in Indonesia.

Why stay in Indonesia?
Isn't that the country which asked us to get the hell out sooner rather than later? And to get our damned ships out of their waters?

That Indonesia?

5 posted on 01/15/2005 10:08:02 PM PST by Publius6961 (The most abundant things in the universe are hydrogen, ignorance and stupidity.)
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