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A soaring list of dead and injured on Thailands southern
coast
By John Roberts
29 December 2004
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The impact of the tsunami waves that began crashing into Thailands
southern Andaman Sea coastal towns at 9 a.m., local time on Sunday
was only beginning to be comprehended two days later. By then,
authorities had listed 1,473 dead and 7,000 injured.
Foreign tourists, holiday makers, resort staff and fishing
villagers received no warning of the approaching disaster, despite
the fact that officials of the countrys Meteorological Department
had been discussing the possibility of a tsunami hitting the area
an hour before the waves struck. The worst affected provinces
were Ranong, Phangnga, Phuket, Krabi, Satun and Trang.
Most reported deaths occurred in the Phuket and Phangnga areas,
sites of popular tourist resorts. A high proportion were foreign
tourists. But impoverished coastal fishing villages were also
hard hit. Built on stilts, these were simply washed away, taking
whole families and communities.
Government officials admit that casualty figures will continue
to grow and that they have no real idea how many have been killed
or injured. Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra told the press on
Tuesday that at least 2,000 had died. However no sooner had that
estimate been made than 800 bodies were reported discovered in
a Sofitel hotel, run by the French resort firm Accor, near the
town of Khao Lak in northern Phuket. An Accor spokesperson said
there were 350 guests and 250 staff in the hotel when it was hit
by a wave of water.
The scenes in Khao Lak are symptomatic of the chaos in all
the areas hit by the tsunami. Media reports describe bodies in
swimming pools, in trees and in the streets. The town, which is
400 metres inland, has become uninhabitable. Soldiers are searching
buildings and removing bodies in trucks. The risk of death from
disease grows every hour. Water supplies have been contaminated
with salt water.
The Bangkok Post reported that thousands were still
missing in Phangnga. Rescue workers believed that many could be
buried under the mud covering the beaches of the Khao Lak-Lam
Ru National Park. The areaone of the hardest hitis
popular with European tourists who want to holiday away from the
hustle and bustle of the more developed resorts.
Local volunteer rescue worker Tanaphon Sangkhum told the paper
that in the first three hours of digging his team had found 50
corpses in the mud, mainly Thai and foreign tourists. This
resort town used to come alive during this time of year. But all
the buildings and people were gone in the blink of an eye, swallowed
by the huge tidal waves. It is the worst catastrophe of my life.
Medical facilities in the devastated areas have been unable
to cope with the dead and injured, which continue to pour in.
Director of the Vajira Phuket Hospital Jessada Chungpaibulpatana
told the press, Never before has the hospital been in such
a chaotic situation.
But the government response so far has been out of all proportion
to the scale of the disaster. As of Tuesday, according to deputy
health minister Suchai Charoenratanakul, just 100 extra doctors
and nurses had been sent to hospitals in the affected areas. The
army has announced the dispatch of 19 truckloads of engineers
to help with reconstruction and 100 engineers to work on lighting
and water supplies.
In Krabi, survivor Sitthi Lhikao said locals were helping foreigners
as the government had sent no aid. Villagers here helped
provide clothes to the victims, but it was still not enough.
Many tourists had only swimsuits and needed dry clothes and sanitary
napkins. He told Bangkok newspaper the Nation that the
price of a carton of milk in the area had gone up 150 percent,
and that the money being pooled by the villagers to help the stranded
foreigners was inadequate to meet the need.
Rescue workers and paramedics sent to the remote Phi Phi Island,
made famous by the Hollywood movie, The Beach, expressed
frustration at the limited scale of the rescue effort. Wallop
Jirasiriwatana told the media his emergency medical team felt
helpless. My job is to rescue injured people but thats
not what were doing. Were just finding bodies,
he said. It looks bad for the government, but there is no
coordination. We need a master plan.
No warning
Despite the massive devastation on Thailands southern
coast, there is no doubt that with an hours warning, or
even, in some cases at least, as little as 10 minutes, most, if
not all of the fatalities could have been avoided. Graphic media
reports make clear that many survivors were able to save themselves,
once they became aware of the danger, by simply outrunning the
incoming surge, or by getting to higher ground.
The complete absence of any warning is likely to become the
most critical political issue for the Thaksin government. On Tuesday
the prime minister refused to answer journalists questions
about tsunami alerts.
Nevertheless, the fact is that international warnings were
available to Thai government officials about the massive earthquake
in Sumatra soon after it occurred. Thailand is one of the 26 nations
connected to the Honolulu-based Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre,
which issued the warning.
Thai Meteorological Department officers, who were attending
a seminar, convened an emergency meeting chaired by the departments
director-general, Supharerk Tansrirat-tanawong. At that time they
knew that the quake measured at least 8.1 on the Richter scale,
a huge eruption by any standard.
Like meteorology experts elsewhere, the Thais understanding
of the event was limited by the fact that there were no sensor
devices in the Indian Ocean area to measure currents and changes
in water levels. These are necessary to detect a tsunami and predict
its course. But they were aware of the possibility of a tsunami
developing.
A report in the Nation on Tuesday indicates that
the threat to the south was recognised at the meeting, despite
the lack of full information. But sources said they did
discuss the likelihood that a tsunami could hit Thailands
Andaman Sea coastal towns. This was also played down, the
newspaper alleges.
The report quotes an official who attended the meeting saying
that the decision not to issue a warning was motivated by the
wish not to upset the tourist industry. The very important
factor in making the decision was that its high [tourist]
season and hotel rooms were nearly 100 percent full. If we issued
a warning, which would have led to evacuation, [and if nothing
happened], what would happen then? Business would be instantaneously
affected. It would be beyond the Meteorological Departments
ability to handle. We could go under if [the tsunami] didnt
come. We hesitated for a while whether we should issue a warning
or not. It was discussed but we didnt have a chance to do
it.
There is little doubt that this damning admission reflects,
at least indirectly, the priorities of the Thaksin regime. During
the first outbreak of the bird flu epidemic, the government did
everything it could to protect the powerful Thai business interests
involved in the poultry industry by initially concealing the extent
of the outbreak. It then announced the crisis was over before
any long-term measures were taken to deal with it.
At this stage, it is not clear whether Thaksin or his cabinet
ministers were involved in the decision to refrain from issuing
a warning. It is more than likely, however, that the government
will do everything it can to ensure that no further information
on the issue comes to light.
See Also:
Tsunami death toll rises to 60,000 amid
warnings of epidemics
[29 December 2004]
Devastating tidal wave kills more than
13,000 in southern Asia
[27 December 2004]
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