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Race to bury Asia's dead as toll
soars near 60,000
Sri Lanka -
Stricken Indian Ocean nations worked swiftly on Wednesday to bury
thousands of bodies as experts warned disease could kill as many
people as the 60,000 already dead from the violent crush of Sunday's
tsunami.
While governments and rescuers tried
to cope with the aftermath of possibly the deadliest tsunami in more
than 200 years, the United Nations mobilized what it called the
biggest relief operation in its history.
The ocean surge was triggered by a
magnitude 9.0 undersea earthquake off the Indonesian island of
Sumatra, spreading in an arc of death across the Indian Ocean striking
nations from Indonesia to Sri Lanka, and beyond across to Africa.
U.S. scientists said on Tuesday the
quake that set off the killer wall of water permanently moved tectonic
plates beneath the Indian Ocean as much as 30 meters (98 feet),
slightly shifting islands near Sumatra.
Survivors told harrowing tales of the
moment the tsunami, up to 10 meters (30 feet) high, struck towns and
resorts, sucking holidaymakers off beaches into the ocean, smashing
people and debris through buildings, leaving more than 59,000 dead and
thousands more missing and injured.
UNICEF executive director Carol
Bellamy said children could account for up to a third of the dead.
"Rescuers are holding their breath
while using their bare hands, axes, or shovels to dig through piles of
wrecked buildings and debris at Khao Lak," said Chailert
Piyorattanachote, the senior official in the Thai province.
In a further threat to the region,
disease could kill as many people as those killed by the wall of
water, a top World Health Organization (WHO) official said.
"There is certainly a chance that we
could have as many dying from communicable diseases as from the
tsunami," the WHO's Dr David Nabarro told a news conference.
Gerhard Berz, a top risk researcher
at Munich Re, the world's largest reinsurer, estimated the economic
cost of the devastation at more than $13 billion.
Secretary of State Colin Powell said
the international community may have to give billions of dollars in
aid.
In Sri Lanka, hundreds of people were
killed when a wave crashed into a train traveling to Galle from
Colombo, wrecking carriages and uprooting the track it was traveling
on. The train was called "Sea Queen."
In Thailand, where thousands of
tourists were enjoying a Christmas break to escape the northern
winter, 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.
Some 136 foreign nationals and
tourists were confirmed dead and 2,689 were still missing. Some 1,500
Swedes and 800 Norwegians were still unaccounted for.
Of the overall death toll so far,
Indonesia has suffered the biggest number of victims, with 27,174
dead.
Nearly all the deaths in Indonesia
were in the northwestern province of Aceh at the tip of Sumatra.
Rescue crews were still trying to reach cut off areas. Separatist
rebels announced a truce while people search for loved ones.
The stench of decomposing corpses
spread over the provincial capital Banda Aceh, where fresh water, food
and fuel were in short supply. Bodies lay scattered in the streets.
One of the worst hit cities was
Meulaboh, about 150 km (90 miles) from the quake's epicenter. The
mayor Tengku Zulkarnaen said three-quarters of his city had been
washed away.
Sri Lanka reported around 19,000
dead. India's toll of 11,500 included at least 7,000 on one
archipelago, the Andamans and Nicobar. On one island, the surge of
water killed two-thirds of the population.
Hundreds of others died in the
Maldives, Myanmar and Malaysia. The arc of water struck as far as
Somalia and Kenya. Fishing villages, ports and resorts were
devastated, power and communications cut and homes destroyed.
The tremor, the biggest in 40 years,
ripped a chasm in the sea bed which set off the tsunami, perhaps the
deadliest for hundreds of years.
A tsunami at Krakatoa in 1883 killed
36,000 and one in the south China Sea in 1782 40,000, according to the
National Geophysical Data Center in the United States.
At the Thai holiday resort of Phuket,
foreign tourists pored over names on hospital lists and peered at 80
hospital photos of swollen, 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 and rescuers flew into
the region from around the globe. More than 20 countries have pledged
emergency aid worth more than $60 million. --
Reuters
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