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Death Toll Rises After Massive Quake, Tidal Waves

 
  

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FinderWolf
13:17 / 28.12.04
This is just staggering. reports of bodies littering the streets, washing up on beach shores, in the thousands. India, Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, and more.

BANDA ACEH, Indonesia - Mourners in Sri Lanka used their bare hands to dig graves Tuesday while hungry islanders in Indonesia turned to looting in the aftermath of Asia's devastating tsunamis. Thousands more bodies were found in Indonesia, dramatically increasing the death toll across 11 nations to around 44,000.

Amateur Footage Shows Tsunami Hitting Resort
(AP Video)

Tsunami Kills 21,000 in Nine Countries
(AP Video)

Emergency workers who reached Aceh province at the northern tip of Indonesia's Sumatra island found that 10,000 people had been killed in a single town, Meulaboh, said Purnomo Sidik, national disaster director at the Social Affairs Ministry.

Another 9,000 were confirmed dead so far in the provincial capital, Banda Aceh, and surrounding towns, he said. Soldiers and volunteers combed seaside districts and dug into rubble of destroyed houses to seek survivors and retrieve the dead amid unconfirmed reports that other towns along Aceh's west coast had been demolished.

With aid not arriving quick enough, desperate residents in Meulaboh and other towns in Aceh — a region that was unique in that it was struck both by Sunday's massive quake and the killer waves that followed — were turning to looting.

"It is every person for themselves here," district official Tengku Zulkarnain told el-Shinta radio station from the area.

"People are looting, but not because they are evil, but they are hungry," said Red Cross official Irman Rachmat in Banda Aceh.

In Sri Lanka, the toll also mounted significantly. Around 1,000 people were dead or missing and feared dead from a train that was flung off its tracks when the gigantic waves hit. Rescuers pulled 204 bodies from the train's eight carriages — reduced to twisted metal — and cremated or buried them Tuesday next to the railroad track that runs along the coastline.

More than 18,700 people died in Sri Lanka, more than 4,000 in India and more than 1,500 in Thailand, with numbers expected to rise. The Indonesian vice president's estimate that his country's coastlines held up to 25,000 victims would bring the potential toll up to 50,000.

Europeans desperately sought relatives missing from holidays in Southeast Asia — particularly Thailand, where bodies littered the once crowded beach resorts. Near the devastated Similan Beach and Spa Resort, where mostly German tourists were staying, a naked corpse hung suspended from a tree Tuesday as if crucified.

A blond two-year-old Swedish boy, Hannes Bergstroem, found sitting alone on a road in Thailand and taken to a hospital was reunited with his uncle, who saw the boy's picture on the hospital's Web site.

"This is a miracle, the biggest thing that could happen," said the uncle, who identified himself as Jim.

So far, more than 80 Westerners have been confirmed dead across the region — including 11 Americans. But a British consulate official in Thailand warned that hundreds more foreign tourists were likely killed in the country's resorts.

In Sri Lanka, more than 300 people crammed into the Infant Jesus Church at Orrs Hill, located on high ground from their ravaged fishing villages. Families and childres slept on pews and the cement floor.

"We had never seen the sea looking like that. It was like as if a calm sea had suddenly become a raging monster," said one woman, Haalima, recalling the giant wave that swept away her 5-year-old grandson, Adil.

Adil was making sandcastles with his younger sister, Reeze, while Haalima sat in her home Sunday morning. Haalima said the girl ran to her complaining that waves had crushed their castles, then came screams and water entered the home. "When we looked, there was no shore anymore and no Adil," she said.

In Sri Lanka's severely hit town of Galle, officials mounted a loudspeaker on a fire engine to advise residents to lay bodies of the dead on roads for collection and burial. Elsewhere in Sri Lanka, residents took on burial efforts with forks or even bare hands to scrape a final resting place for victims.

The tidal waves and flooding uprooted land mines in war-torn Sri Lanka, threatening to kill or maim aid workers and survivors who are attempting to return to what's left of their homes.

Amid the devastation, however, were some miraculous stories of survival.

In Malaysia, a 20-day-old baby was found alive on a floating mattress. She and her family were later reunited. A Hong Kong couple vacationing in Thailand clung to a mattress for six hours.

The disaster could be history's costliest, with "many billions of dollars" of damage, said U.N. Undersecretary Jan Egeland, who is in charge of emergency relief coordination.

Hundreds of thousands have lost everything, and millions face a hazardous future because of polluted drinking water, a lack of sanitation and no health services, he said.

Scores of people were also killed in Malaysia, Myanmar, Bangladesh, the Maldives. The tidal waves traveled as far as Somalia, where hundreds were reported dead, and Seychelles, where three were killed.

Children have emerged as the biggest victims of Sunday's quake-born tidal waves. The U.N. organization estimates at least one-third of the tens of thousands who died were children, said UNICEF (news - web sites) spokesman Alfred Ironside in New York.

Officials in Thailand and Indonesia conceded that immediate public warnings of gigantic waves could have saved lives. The only known warning issued by Thai authorities reached resort operators when it was too late. The waves hit Sri Lanka and India more than two hours after the quake.

But governments insisted they couldn't have known the true danger because there is no international system in place to track tsunamis in the Indian Ocean, and they could not afford the sophisticated equipment to build one.

For most people around the shores across the region, the only warning Sunday of the disaster came when shallow coastal waters disappeared, sucked away by the approaching tsunami, before returning as a massive wall of water. The waves wiped out villages, lifted cars and boats, yanked children from the arms of parents and swept away beachgoers, scuba divers and fishermen.

The United States dispatched disaster teams and prepared a $15 million aid package to the Asian countries, and the 25-nation European Union (news - web sites) promised to deliver $4 million. Japan, Portugal, China and Russia were sending teams of experts.

Egeland said he expected hundreds of relief airplanes from two dozen countries within the next 48 hours.

------------

It may even have been such a powerful quake that it affected the earth's orbit a little bit:

Yahoo News story

This is just unreal. Makes 9/11 look like a walk in the park.
 
 
FinderWolf
13:21 / 28.12.04
It's weird how the American media is processing this - the Daily News has a story about supermodel Petra Nemcova having been traveling there and she tells about the disaster from her perspective....and a while ago, there were reports on the Net that Jet Li was missing for a while and possibly died during the disaster, but apparently he's turned up and is ok.

It's like it's easier for people to process if it involves familiar faces i.e. celebrities...
 
 
FinderWolf
14:22 / 28.12.04
The comic book community has started its relief efforts:

http://www.newcomicreviews.com/auction/

Mike Oeming has donated the original cover art to an issue of Powers plus 3 interior pages for a blind auction to help survivors of yesterday's tsunamis in South Asia.

Prize: Powers cover plus 3 interior pages
Auction: Blind donation auction, After money has been collected, the winner will be notified.
Money: Every penny donated for the auction will go to help victims of the tsunami in Asia.

Add your own auctions!

Just register on the site and add your own auctions for charity!

and....

https://www.redcross.org/donate/donation-form.asp

South Asia needs emergency medical attention, relief, and housing for thousands and thousands of survivors from yesterday's tsunamis. Red Cross is currently mobilizing to help save as many people as possible.

Red Cross donations are a minimum of $5. Most of us spend $5 a week at a comic shop. Would it kill us to miss $5 bucks of comics each for a week? That's 2 comics. If we all sacrifice 2 comics next week, we can raise over $1,000.

I'm also thinking about adding a preorder for Ciderview #5 (will be out in late January to Feb), and I will donate every single penny that doesn't go to relief organizations to help with one of the most devasting natural catastrophes of this era.

Please consider helping. People need us.
 
 
FinderWolf
14:36 / 28.12.04
Asia Struggles As Death Toll Hits 44,000

(AP) - Mourners in Sri Lanka used their bare hands to dig graves Tuesday while hungry islanders in Indonesia turned to looting in the aftermath of Asia's devastating tsunamis. Thousands more bodies were found in Indonesia, dramatically increasing the death toll across 11 nations to around 44,000. Emergency workers who reached Aceh province at the northern tip of Indonesia's Sumatra island found that 10,000 people had been killed in a single town, Meulaboh, said Purnomo Sidik, national disaster director at the Social Affairs Ministry.
 
 
FinderWolf
14:41 / 28.12.04
Scientists in USA saw tsunami coming

Tue Dec 28, 7:11 AM ET Top Stories - USATODAY.com
By Dan Vergano, USA TODAY

Minutes after a massive earthquake rocked the Indian Ocean on Sunday, international ocean monitors knew that a tsunami would likely follow. But they didn't know whom to tell.

"We put out a bulletin within 20 minutes, technically as fast as we could do it," says Jeff LaDouce of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. LaDouce says e-mails were dispatched to Indonesian officials, but he doesn't know what happened to the information.

The problem is that Sunday's earthquake struck the unmonitored Indian Ocean. An international system of buoys and monitoring stations - the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center based in Hawaii - spans the Pacific, alerting nations there to any oncoming disasters. But no such system guards the Indian Ocean.

(There isn't one in the Atlantic Ocean because there are comparatively few earthquakes there. LaDouce says efforts are being made in the Caribbean to set up a warning system after last year's tsunami caused by the volcanic collapse on the island of Montserrat.)
 
 
Hieronymus
16:31 / 28.12.04
I'm so glad you're on top of this, FinderWolf. The more I read, the more I have to fight back tears. So horrific.

I'm in the process of heading back home for the holidays but, once there, I'm donating blood to the Red Cross. They're in desperate need of it from what I read. And you're right about the $5. I can forgo a few issues for this.

In addition to the Red Cross, MSNBC has an article on the other charities accepting donations as well as information in case any US Barbelithers know someone that might be missing there.
 
 
FinderWolf
16:47 / 28.12.04
from CNN.com:

In a news conference at U.N. headquarters in New York Monday, Egeland called for a major international response [to the disaster] -- and went so far as to call the U.S. government and others "stingy" on foreign aid in general.

"If, actually, the foreign assistance of many countries now is 0.1 or 0.2 percent of the gross national income, I think that is stingy, really," he said. "I don't think that is very generous."

In an interview Monday night with CNN, Egeland reiterated his view: "It bothers me that we -- the rich nations -- are not becoming more generous the more rich we become."

The average rich country gives just 0.2 percent of its national income to international solidarity and international assistance, he said.

"We keep 99.8 percent to ourselves, on average. I don't think that's very generous," he said.

--

Colin Powell said this morning that the characterization of US aid as generally 'stingy' is inaccurate and unfair.
 
 
FinderWolf
16:49 / 28.12.04
So far the US has given $15 million to the relief effort, by the way.

the latest summary from CNN.com:

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

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

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

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

No warning
The tsunamis struck with no warning at 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 quake represented the energy released from a rupture in the earth's crust more than 600 miles (1,000 kilometers) long, the U.S. Geological Survey's National Earthquake Information Center (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.

--

I didn't realize the quake last year in Iran was THAT bad. 30,000 dead and 30,000 injured?? Unbelievable...
 
 
FinderWolf
16:56 / 28.12.04
more from CNN on US relief efforts...

Powell said the United States had responded to an appeal by the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent by providing $4 million of the $7 million it initially requested worldwide.

The U.S. State Department said an additional $20 million in aid will be added to the $15 million the United States has already pledged for nations hit by the tsunamis.

In addition, said Powell, nine patrol planes and 12 C-130 cargo planes packed with relief supplies were on their way to southern Asia.

and....

Indonesia struggles to bury dead

Tuesday, December 28, 2004 Posted: 8:06 AM EST (1306 GMT)

• Red Cross calls for quake aid
• Bodies pile up in Indonesia
• Quake '4th largest since 1899'
• World reacts to disaster
• Survivor tells of devastation
• Phuket paradise washed away
• Eyewitnesses recount terror
• Survivor: This is surreal

LHOKSEUMAWE, Indonesia (AP) -- Authorities struggled to bury the dead and desperate residents looted stores Tuesday on Indonesia's Sumatra Island, where an earthquake and tsunamis killed about 15,000 people, the government said.

As medicine and other emergency supplies began arriving in the island's worst-hit province of Aceh, scores of corpses lay uncollected on the streets, triggering fears of an outbreak of disease.

The military said it had sent three planes of emergency supplies to Aceh. The United Nations in Jakarta said 175 tons of rice arrived in the province late Monday, and that it expected to fly in medical supplies Thursday.

The quake and tsunami has devastated much of the province's infrastructure, and distribution of supplies to its 4.3 million people will be difficult, foreign aid workers warned.

"We have not been provided any drinking water or medicine," said Aminah, one of 3,000 refugees living in tents in the northern Aceh city of Lhokseumawe.

Aceh has been wracked by a separatist war for the past 26 years, and Jakarta had banned foreign journalists and international aid agency representatives from visiting the region. But the government Monday lifted the ban, and said it would welcome aid.

----

The quote up there about a survivor saying "This is surreal" is just spot on with how I'm feeling....it's like that movie The Day After Tomorrow. It's that awful feeling similar to after 9/11... but what's even sadder is that I don't hear people in my office talking about this much, and many people seem to not really be aware of it... I know it can feel distant since it happened on the other side of the world, but there's something unsettling about that...
 
 
FinderWolf
17:00 / 28.12.04
I have to point out, though, that I copied the below from a message board from one of my first posts up above:

>> Red Cross donations are a minimum of $5. Most of us spend $5 a week at a comic shop. Would it kill us to miss $5 bucks of comics each for a week? That's 2 comics. If we all sacrifice 2 comics next week, we can raise over $1,000.

>> I'm also thinking about adding a preorder for Ciderview #5 (will be out in late January to Feb), and I will donate every single penny that doesn't go to relief organizations to help with one of the most devasting natural catastrophes of this era.

>> Please consider helping. People need us.

Just wanted to make clear that wasn't stuff that I wrote. I don't even know what Ciderview is, didn't look at my cut and paste carefully enough. I think it's a small press comic book. But the donation sentiment I agree with completely, obviously...
 
 
FinderWolf
17:11 / 28.12.04
I didn't know that the Red Cross was also called Red Crescent -- I suppose so the Muslim world isn't offended by the Catholic/Christian cross?
 
 
FinderWolf
17:34 / 28.12.04
>> Asian disaster toll surges past 55,000 as relief operations stall

1 hour, 6 minutes ago Top Stories - AFP

BANDA ACEH, Indonesia (AFP) - Logistical problems hampered a massive humanitarian relief operation along Asia's devastated shores as the death toll from a huge earthquake and killer tidal waves surged past 55,000.

With the scale of the catastrophe rapidly unfolding, the confirmed number of dead in 10 countries shot up to 55,335 and looks set to go even higher.

Indonesia's Aceh province accounted for half of those killed, or 27,174, while in Sri Lanka 17,800 were confirmed dead.

The head of Italy's civil emergency relief services, charged with coordinating all rescue operations in the region by the European Union (news - web sites), warned the overall death toll could surpass 100,000.

"The number of victims is destined to increase over the coming days and I fear that in the end it will be more than 100,000 deaths even if we will never know the exact figure because there is no register of the population in most of the affected countries," Guido Bertolaso, director of the Italian civil protection unit said.

In some areas food and medicines were in desperately short supply.

In India's Andaman and Nicobar islands, where at least 4,000 people are confirmed dead, coastguard officials said the toll on Car Nicobar alone could top 10,000.

Police said they had received no word from dozens of islands in the Andaman and Nicobar chain which stretch over 800 kilometres (496 miles) and were close to the epicentre of the earthquake.

----

World's biggest aid operation for devastated Asian countries
1 hour, 37 minutes ago Science - AFP

GENEVA (AFP) - The world's biggest-ever aid operation got into gear to help Asian countries stricken by tsunamis that smashed coastal towns and left misery and the risk of disease in their wake.

World's. Biggest.

could be around 100,000 dead when the smoke clears... unreal...
 
 
Hieronymus
18:19 / 28.12.04
FinderWolf, thanks for all the info. What do other Lithers feel about what's happened?
 
 
FinderWolf
18:52 / 28.12.04
The UN just "took back" the 'stingy' comment, BTW.

Is anyone else reading this thread? Maybe people just aren't on Barbelith that much today, or they're reading all the news and not commenting on it on message boards...

Any 'Lithers near that area of the world?
 
 
diz
19:05 / 28.12.04
i read somewhere last night that, while reports are sketchy, it seems that up to half of the victims may have been children, who appear to have been disproportionately affected. this means the crisis will actually have a massive impact on the demographics of the region, rippling out over the next generation.

also, the quake was apparently massive enough to cause the entire fucking planet to wobble noticeably on its axis. also, certain islands may have been moved as much as twenty feet.

unbelievable scale here. just unbelievable.
 
 
FinderWolf
19:48 / 28.12.04
Over 300 Bodies Found on 'The Beach' Island
Tue Dec 28,12:42 PM ET Top Stories - Reuters

By Karishma Vyas
AP/Yahoo News

Phi Phi Island, Thailand (Reuters) - Rescue workers recovered more than 300 bodies on Thailand's remote Phi Phi Island on Tuesday, two days after a series of powerful waves devastated the tourist paradise.

Bloated and decaying bodies continued to wash ashore as hopes of finding survivors in the rubble of hotels and shops slowly faded on the tiny island made famous by Leonardo DiCaprio's film "The Beach."

"It's not hard to find the bodies. You just have to follow the smell," said 43-year-old French rescue volunteer, Serge Barros.

"It's hard to tell which bodies are foreign because they are just unrecognizable. They have discolored and many have their tongues sticking out because they drowned," he told Reuters while trawling the beach for more bodies.

Barros said resources and rescue workers on the island were stretched to breaking point with not enough people to carry the overwhelming number of corpses.

"We have been working all day in this incredible heat to find bodies but it's not easy to do much else. We don't have people to move them, and once they are moved, the bodies are just put in rows in the sun," he said.
 
 
FinderWolf
12:31 / 29.12.04
now something like 62,000 and climbing.
 
 
grant
16:16 / 29.12.04
In Thailand, they're having trouble telling the bodies of locals from the bodies of European tourists. Apparently the bloating and discoloration has started to set in. Identifying the tourists is becoming really difficult, unless they happened to have a passport in their pocket or something.

CNN puts the current death toll over 80,000 as rescue workers finally get into the jungles of Aceh and the remote islands of Nicobar, Andaman and the Maldives.

In India, they're burning stacks of bodies in oceanfront pyres. In Banda Aceh, the provincial capital of Aceh, Sumatra, they're using bulldozers to dig mass graves.

 
 
FinderWolf
17:34 / 29.12.04
http://tsunamihelp.blogspot.com/

A good site/resource.
 
 
■
18:15 / 29.12.04
£15 million? That's the best we can fucking do? I wondered how much that would buy the military. Turn out it's about two Apache gunships.
I normally shrug a little at natural disasters and wonder how much we can really do given that problems are usually exacerbated by local prevailing economic conditions etc etc etc. Quite aside from the horror locally, this time it's a reasonably stable area, we've all been affected and are going to be affected further. It's time to start appealing to people's selfish instincts to get some kind of effect. Food supplies, tourism industry collapse, insurance payouts are all going to fuck our economies sideways. Let's not forget the massively increased risk of pandemics reaching our shores. The best we can do to try and sort this out is the cost of two measly helicopters? I don't think so. I've opened my wallet a little, and will be doing so again soon.
I think a sensible solution might be to implement an optional emergency tax. Set some system up where those who want to opt in can choose to give a single percentage of their income as extra tax to be sent direct. If we're serious about stability and the threat of terrorism in Asia and want to set a good example, what better than to help rebuild their economies properly. To show that we can be selfless, that we care more about them than we do about killing people in the desert. Indonesia has a huge Muslim population, Burma is in need of help even if it won't admit it. I'm not saying that we should use charity as a lever to change things (very bad precedent, not to be encouraged), but it would be one hell of a nice side effect of sorting things out that we were seen to be the good guys for a change. Oh, I dunno. Needs more thought, but £15m? Pah. That's about ten Edinburgh New Town flats.
 
 
Tryphena Absent
22:15 / 29.12.04
it seems that up to half of the victims may have been children, who appear to have been disproportionately affected

Well most of these people were killed by a giant wave that washed them away and adults are larger, stronger and far more likely to hang on to buildings for a longer time. It's not odd that the number of children killed is disproportionately high. Natural disasters often kill more children than adults but it is very sad. Very hard to wrap your head around damage that isn't done by other people but by the planet.

I find this whole thing quite bewildering actually. Apparently Britain had moved a milimetre, it's so weird to contemplate that an earthquake can move a land mass that's so far away.
 
 
STOATIE LIEKS CHOCOLATE MILK
23:19 / 29.12.04
And Mr Tony's decided there'd be "no practical use" in cutting short his holiday in Egypt.
Well, there ma indeed be no "practical" use, but it would show at least a smidgen of respect...
 
 
LykeX
03:47 / 30.12.04
What do other Lithers feel about what's happened?

Right now I'm wondering if I've grown more callous. Quite frankly I don't feel much. Not in an emotionally numb kind of way, but as in indifference. Intellectually I can see that what happened is a tragedy for those involved, but I just can't seem to get emotionally involved.

I see the death toll, currently at 80,000 and probably rising, I hear that some islands in the area have moved as much as 20 meters. I can see that this is a big thing, but I feel completely detached, as if it's not really that important.

Am I totally demented? Does anyone else feel like this?
 
 
pointless and uncalled for
11:54 / 30.12.04
You're not demented and you're not the only one. Not that I'm feeling that way but detachment to catastophic events is quite common. Once an event exceeds certain limits it becomes very difficult to apply a comprehendable frame of reference, particularly if there is no direct emotional attachment.
 
 
FinderWolf
15:33 / 30.12.04
Yeah, I started to feel that shortly after the news broke. And the higher the number gets, the more I'm just dumbfounded... I'm beginning to think that even if it happened closer to the USA, my mind would be shutting down on certain levels as the scope and numbers got larger and larger, much like 9/11's surreal quality.

---
CNN.com

Tsunami death toll tops 116,000

The death toll from Sunday's tsunamis jumped sharply today to over 116,000 after Indonesia reported nearly 80,000 people were killed in that country alone. Emergency workers said that in some parts of Indonesia's Aceh province as many as one in four people are dead.
 
 
fluid_state
16:31 / 30.12.04
I'd like to think the sheer random calamity shuts down the brain at the self-preservation instinct. Getting over the idea that you could get hit by a bus when you go outside is pretty easy; the idea that you and 99,999 other people could be hit by the same bus at the same time makes me totally inarticulate. What's the sane response to that?
 
 
HCE
17:46 / 30.12.04
The toll gets so much worse each time I hear about it -- not just a little worse, but massively.
 
 
grant
18:30 / 30.12.04
Yeah, apparently what we're getting now is reports from islands and remote villages that rescue teams are only getting to now -- after the wave, they just went blank, as far as phones & electricity, so no one had any idea of what was going on there.

----

One explanation for the high toll among children: before the waves come, the ocean rises, like a high tide, then suddenly recedes. Fish are left flopping around on the beach. Kids think, "Hey! Dinner for the family! Grab it! Grab it!" They rush down to the waterline, ignoring that strange roaring sound, and then the ocean comes.

-----

I don't feel numb or disconnected about this because, I think, I spent yesterday researching an awful prophecy story about this (four prophets say U.S. is next!), and because about 10 years ago, I visited places not far from there. I was in a guesthouse on the Galle road in Mt. Lavinia and a little further south. I never made it to Galle, but I was close enough to know what it's like.

I remember the shanties along the coastal railroad tracks. The kids playing on the beach.

So I've got a frame of reference.
 
 
grant
18:56 / 30.12.04
hypo cube: I've been spreading that comparison around quite a bit -- the Apache gunships vs. US gov't aid (we've pledged $35 million).

Canada today pledged $40 million. Yesterday, Spain -- the place with the trains that got blown to hell in March -- pledged $68 million.

On the other hand, multinational corps are doing some good work... Pfizer has equalled the US gov't pledge all on its own, and Time-Warner is matching any donation made by any of its employees. Even Starbucks is sending in a little something for every cup of Sumatran coffee sold.

And yesterday, Amazon.com set up this page. So far, they've sent more than $3.5 million in aid to the Red Cross.

-----

Most recent death toll figures, according to Reuters, have topped 120,000.

How many people is 120,000?

In 2003, Amazon.com had 120,000 books in its catalogue.

Gary, Indiana... or Amarillo, Texas... or the country of St. Vincent and the Grenadines each have a population of 120,000.

Picture six sold-out basketball stadiums.
 
 
■
19:35 / 30.12.04
How many people is 120,000?
About the same as those who died in the Hiroshima bombing.
Let's see. It's about three Atlantic Citys (NJ) or Norwich (UK) or the best part of the city of Orlando (FL). And those are just the people who have been counted. I've just seen the front page of our paper tomorrow and it shows exactly what a 20m wave coming toward you looks like. It's fucking terrifying.
 
 
Tryphena Absent
19:40 / 30.12.04
And Mr Tony's decided there'd be "no practical use" in cutting short his holiday in Egypt.
Well, there ma indeed be no "practical" use, but it would show at least a smidgen of respect...


But why would we want him to do that? He's only a nasty Head of State. I'd much rather have the people who are actually going to do something standing up and telling us what's going on and how they're going to help. Blair would only make a pointless and patronising speech to Britain... who needs another one of those?
 
 
pointless and uncalled for
09:06 / 31.12.04
5 million people are considered in need of immediate humanitarian assistance with large numbers now considered displaced persons.

The current list of key pledges as reported by the BBC
World Bank $250m
UK $96m
EU $44m
US: $35m
Canada: $33m
Japan: $30m
Australia: $27m
France: $20.4m
Denmark: $15.6m
Saudi Arabia: $10m

That's approximately $112 per person, or roughly £60.

How many people is five million? Well, it's roughly the entire white population of London, or at a rough guesstimate the entire population of Zones 1, 2, 3 and 4 in London. It's also 5 times the population of the City of Birmingham or the population of Maryland.

So in the most basic terms, unless we hear the word billion cropping up in the very near future, a lot more people are going to die.
 
 
unheimlich manoeuvre
17:15 / 31.12.04
Wikipedia has got a lot of pertinent information. The before and after satellite images of part of Banda Aceh are disturbing. Was Malaysia the only country to notify it's population of the oncoming tsunami?
 
 
■
17:22 / 31.12.04
The US have upped to $350 million, which is good news, but that should just be the start. The rebuilding will take years and it should be made very clear internationally that World Bank debts should be dropped. I read somewhere that the reason Chancellor Schroder is so keen to get debt cleared is that he was in Indonesia when it hit and had to be airlifted. Anyone else heard that?
 
 
unheimlich manoeuvre
18:59 / 31.12.04
The former German chancellor Helmut Köhl yesterday compared the tsunami devastation he saw in Sri Lanka to the effects of Second World War bombing.

...

Mr Köhl, 74, was airlifted from the third floor of his hotel in Thalpe, near Galle, by the Sri Lankan air force after the wave flooded its first two storeys.



telegraph 31/12/04
 
  

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