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Asian nations remember tsunami
victims
By CHRIS BRUMMITT
Indonesia
- Two years after a devastating tsunami crashed into
coastlines, villagers in hardest-hit Indonesia were preparing for
future disasters, with thousands expected to flee their homes by
foot and car in an early warning drill.
Elsewhere across the tsunami
disaster zone, survivors and other mourners will visit mass graves,
light candles along beaches and listen to temple bells chiming to
mark the moment the waves hit two years ago Tuesday.
"We hope this will be part of the
healing process for those who lost loved ones," said Chamroen
Tankasem, a government official in southern Thailand, a tropical
paradise that was turned into a graveyard in a matter of minutes.
"It will also help us remember what
happened, what we have learned since ... and what more needs to be
done for the people affected."
The magnitude-9.0 earthquake that
ripped apart the ocean floor off Indonesia's Sumatra island on Dec.
26, 2004, spawned giant waves that fanned out across the Indian
Ocean at jetliner speeds, killing an estimated 230,000 people in a
dozen nations.
Walls of water two stories high
swept entire villages to sea in Indonesia and Sri Lanka, submerged
luxury resorts and fishing communities in Thailand and destroyed
thousands of homes in India.
Indonesia, which is prone to
seismic upheaval due to its location on an arc of fault lines,
accounted for nearly two-thirds of those killed. It will mark
Tuesday's anniversary by preparing for future deadly waves.
Ten thousand people are scheduled
to take part in an evacuation drill on the resort island of Bali,
which was unaffected by the 2004 tsunami, fleeing homes in four
villages after authorities set off sirens, said Pari Atmono, a
Ministry of Research and Technology official.
A smaller drill will be held in the
Sumatran town of Padang, which geologists warn could be hit by
another massive tsunami within 30 years. Mourners in devastated Aceh
province will visit mosques and mass graves.
In Thailand, ceremonies will be
held along the Andaman coast with Buddhist prayers to remember the
more than 8,200 killed. Balloons will be launched and candles lit
along beaches once again filled with sun-seeking tourists.
Authorities also will open a
cemetery for hundreds of unidentified tsunami victims.
In Sri Lanka, where the resurgence
of a civil war has added to the misery of survivors, Hindu and
Buddhist temples will ring bells to mark the time the first wave
hit. Two minutes of silence will follow to remember the 35,000
killed there and interfaith ceremonies will be held in India, where
another 18,000 are believed to have died.
The 2004 tsunami generated an
unprecedented outpouring of generosity, with donor pledges reaching
some $13.6 billion, but many of the 2 million made homeless complain
they still do not have adequate places to live.
Some survivors say they are stuck
with poorly built structures that leak, are termite-infested or
located in flood zones. Several aid agencies, meanwhile, have been
forced to delay projects or rebuild homes after contractors and
suppliers ran off with the funds. -- The
Associated Press
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