 |
World marks
tsunami anniversary |
Countries around the Indian Ocean have begun
commemorations marking one year since the tsunami which killed some
200,000 people.
In Indonesia, which was hardest hit, the province
of Aceh observed a
minute's silence at the moment the first waves struck.
Sri Lanka's president led mourning at the site
where a train was engulfed
.
Hundreds of Swedes are among other Western mourners attending
ceremonies in Thailand's beach resorts.
An earthquake off the Indonesian island of Sumatra, believed to be the
second-biggest on record, sent giant waves thousands of kilometres across
the ocean.
Countries as far apart as Malaysia and Somalia were affected.
Aceh was closest to the epicentre of the earthquake and a third of the
total number of people who died across the region died there.
Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono called the minute's
silence at a ceremony on a jetty outside the city of Banda Aceh, where
around 1,000 invited guests sat in front of a specially erected stage.
A haunting recitation from the Koran opened the commemorations, the
BBC's Rachel Harvey reports - then a siren rang out across the flattened
landscape, marking the moment when the first wave struck.
The president paid
tribute to those who had tried to rebuild their
lives over the past year, saying they were a reminder that "life is worth
struggling for".
In Sri Lanka, President Mahinda Rajapakse led a tribute in the southern
village of Peraliya, where a train was swept off the tracks by the waves
with the loss of at least 1,000 lives.
After a two-minute silence at 0930 (0330 GMT) - the time the tsunami
struck - the president unveiled a monument to the country's 31,000 dead.
Local Buddhist monks were preparing for a day of chanting while
butchers hung up their knives in a sign of respect for all life, an
Associated Press correspondent reports.
Thousands of people have been taking part in commemorations in Thailand
on a stretch of coast known as Khao Lak.
The official death toll there stands at 5,395 - two-fifths of them foreign tourists including 126 Britons and
543 Swedes, making the Scandinavian country the worst affected state outside the
region.
(Agencies) |