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India: tsunami warnings could have been made
By Ganesh Dev
10 January 2005
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Thousands died or were left homeless when the December 26 tsunami
struck Indias eastern coast and engulfed the Andaman and
Nicobar Islands in the Bay of Bengal. The response of the Indian
political establishment has revealed its indifference and contempt
toward the poverty-stricken villagers and fishermen who were the
main victims.
The United Progressive Alliance government (UPA) in New Delhi,
along with the state governments in Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh,
Pondicherry and Kerala, have insisted that they were unaware of
the tsunami and could do nothing to save lives. All of them have
defended the lack of a tsunami warning system by insisting that,
unlike the Pacific, the Indian Ocean has not experienced frequent
tsunamis.
The hollow character of these justifications was brought into
sharp focus by the events in the small coastal village of Nallavadu
in Pondicherry. A timely telephone call, warning about the impending
tsunami, saved the villages entire 3,600 inhabitants, as
well as those of three neighbouring villages.
Nallavadu was involved in the M.S. Swaminathan Research Foundations
Information Village Research Project. Vijayakumar, a former project
volunteer, was working in Singapore and heard a tsunami alert
issued there. He immediately phoned the research centre in the
village, which issued an alert. His quick thinking, followed by
swift and coordinated action, led to the evacuation of the four
villages before the tsunami hit the coast.
The vast majority of deaths could have been averted if, like
Singapore, India had been part of an established tsunami warning
system. Even without such a network, however, there were danger
signs that Indian officials failed to respond to. Well before
the tsunami struck the coastline of southern India, the huge waves
had swamped the isolated Indian territory of the Andaman and Nicobar
Islands in the Bay of Bengal.
The undersea earthquake off the Sumatran coast that triggered
the tsunami took place at 6.29 a.m., Indian time. Fifty minutes
later, at 7.19 a.m., one of its aftershocks rocked the Andaman
and Nicobar Islands. Eleven minutes later, at 7.30 a.m., the Indian
Air Force on mainland India received an alert from its airstrip
at Car Nicobar, after which communications with the archipelago
were temporarily lost.
At 7.50 a.m., however, the Chennai unit of the Indian Air Force
contacted Car Nicobar using a higher frequency. The last emergency
message sent out by the 25 air force personnel stationed on the
island, before the tsunami killed them and their families, was
the island is sinking and there is water all over.
Indias own satellites, IRS-P4 and IRS-P6, photographed
the waves crashing over Car Nicobar between 7.30 a.m. and 7.50
a.m.. The satellite photos show the tsunami racing inland along
most of the seashores.
It is clear that there was time to issue warnings, of some
kind, to the coastal population on India. Satellite photos taken
at 8.32 a.m. show that the first tsunami wave hit the mainland
crashing over beaches near Madras and surging up the Adayar river
mouth. Following the first wave, four more hit. The second was
at 9.20 a.m., the third at 10.20 a.m., the fourth at 10.40 a.m.
and the final wave struck at 11.00 a.m.
The official response was a combination of incompetence and
indifference. According to a report in the Indian Express,
Indian Air Force chief S. Krishnaswamy eventually tried to get
in touch with authorities in New Delhi. His assistant sent a messagevia
faxto the home of the former science and technology minister.
No further action was taken.
The private secretary to the cabinet secretary in the UPA government
was not informed of the tsunami until two minutes after the second
wave hit Madras and the southern coast of Tamil Nadu. It was not
until 10.20 a.m. that Cabinet Secretariat officials were informed.
The Crisis Management Groupthe governments main
emergency response unitdid not meet until 1.00 p.m., some
two hours after the final wave hit India and more than five hours
after the Air Force received the SOS from the Car Nicobar air
base. By then it was too late.
In the aftermath of the tsunami, various Indian officials have
attempted to rationalise the failure to issue a warning and save
lives.
The director of seismology at the Indian Meteorological Department,
R.S. Dattatrayam, claimed in the Indian Express that
tsunamis had never been recorded in Indian history,
so it did not occur to us (to prepare for one). Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh made a similar claim at a press conference on January
3. It (the tsunami) was a new phenomenon not experienced
by the country, he stated.
The historical record is different. While tsunamis are not
as frequent as in the Pacific Ocean, they have occurred before
in the Indian Ocean with devastating consequences. The best-known
example is the wave generated by the 1883 volcanic explosion of
the island of Krakatoa near southern Sumatra that killed an estimated
36,000 people throughout the region, including in India. Two years
earlier, on December 31, 1881, an earthquake of magnitude 7.5
off Car Nicobar Island also generated a tsunami.
There have been more recent cases. According to a paper published
last year in the scientific journal, Current Science, an
earthquake on June 26, 1941 of between 7.5 and 8.5 on the Richter
scale, triggered a tsunami that inundated the western coast of
the Andaman Islands and then hit the Indian coast, destroying
property and claiming numerous lives. The earthquake itself caused
extensive damage to the Andamans, including bringing down the
central tower of the infamous Cellular Jail where British authorities
were incarcerating political opponents of colonial rule.
In the magazine, the Week, Dr. Arun Bapat, a Pune-based
seismologist, explained that it was not only Indias
eastern coast and the Andaman and Nicobar Islands that have experienced
tsunamis, but also Indias western coast. An earthquake of
magnitude of 8.25 in the Arabian Sea on November 27, 1945, generated
sizeable waves along the western coast of India. He also pointed
to other potential danger zones in the Indian Ocean that could
produce earthquakes and tsunamis.
There is no denying that tsunamis are less frequent in the
Indian Ocean. But as the events of the past fortnight demonstrate,
to ignore the long-term dangers amounts to criminal negligence.
The lack of a tsunami warning system, which involves relatively
modest costs, has led to the loss of tens of thousands of lives
and suffering to millions. The responsibility rests with the governments
of the region, New Delhi included, and above all the major powers,
which have ignored calls by scientists to establish such a network.
See Also:
The Asian tsunami: why there were no
warnings
[3 January 2005]
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