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Tusnami leaves legacy of crushing ruin
(China Daily)
Updated: 2005-01-09 22:33

Hope still lives on as tragic deaths leave an ache in Sri Lanka

by Nadeera Seneviratne, The Island/Sri Lanka

COLOMBO: Hope lives on here, in Sri Lanka, even though more than thirty thousand o are dead. Their tragic deaths will leave an ache that will traumatize those who loved them -- more so as they buried their relatives and friends in mass graves. The final resting place of the nameless.

But there is still hope that some of the missing are still alive. Perhaps the "missing" are suffering from shock and are unable to communicate their names and details in order to reach family members.


Fatima Rijani, 11 a Sri Lankan tsunami victim who is now orphaned watches a game at the refugee camp where she is now living with relatives Friday Jan. 7, 2005 in Galle, Sri Lanka. [AP]
But more likely the missing are the missing dead. Men, women and children are still being found. The body count forever rising, and those who would have battled hard to save themselves are being washed ashore or on river banks, or are discovered under the debris. Their bodies fall apart when lifted and emanate the stench of death that pervades areas in southern, eastern and northern Sri Lanka.

The southern and western coasts were hit up to half an hour after the eastern area, but nobody was informed. Our nation's geologists failed to warn of the possible tidal waves following the massive earthquake.

Fears of more strikes prevailed last week, driving thousands out of their coastal homes as late as Thursday. Southern roads near to the sea were chock-a-block with traffic that day, with people screaming that no one should go near the coast.

The fear psychosis reigns high, giving rise to panic triggered by reports that the Indian government had warned coastline residents in South India to move inland. Luckily, the Sri Lanka Police and civilians with more presence of mind persuaded the people not to panic.

Galle and Matara were like ghost towns that day. The buses had returned to the Galle bus stand, from where horrific footage of people losing their lives was shot, and along the coast residents were picking up the pieces from the wrecked houses that still stood, cleaning up what was left of their belongings and desperately trying to wash the smell of the sea from their homes. Some of them may have lost one or more members of their family. Yet in a sad and desperate way, those who could remain in their homes without moving to a camp, struggled to continue with their lives in an air still filled with pain and anguish.

They did have help, especially those who lived near the main roads. Relief vans were stopping at places where people queued to obtain what was offered.

Every help 'a blessing'

Sometimes there was a tussle to get the last packet of biscuits, or some such item. Yet a lot more could be done, and for these traumatized people, every little help is a blessing.

At Matara, people died and escaped from St. Servatius Church, as happened in many other places of worship that fateful Sunday. One mother and her son escaped unhurt, but only after the mother, who had paused to warn her son who had clambered the stairs, was washed through the door of the church and ended up in St. Servatius College.

There are hundreds of thousands of such stories. More than seven hundred thousand displaced, more than thirty thousand dead in Sri Lanka alone. All of their untold stories as poignant and important as those that do get told, like those of the "well known" and those of tourists. Each tsunami story however, makes each person well known. Making people recollect these stories however is not the need of the hour. Their faces tell the story that cannot be told, that being the story in itself.

The people, I think, understand this. It is shown in the massive effort to collect relief, with supermarkets in Colombo being periodically emptied throughout the week. In Akuressa, a man on a bicycle hauling coconuts was asked if they were for sale. "No, this is for relief", he said and sped away. "Relief" also has its darker side. Not all of it will reach victims. Some of it may be given with other expectations, forcible or implied. Relief vans have also been seen to carry more sightseers than goods.

Looting of abandoned houses, and the theft of jewellery and money from dead bodies are vile acts that must be exposed. Organized criminals were reported to have spread stories of further tsunami strikes, creating chaos in coast line areas. These people have no feeling for the people of the coastline in this country, many of them now suffering from in fear of the sea, a place that they once adored and from where came food.Now they dare not go near it.


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