Leaders put $4b to work at tsunami summit (Agencies) Updated: 2005-01-06 15:17
World leaders tried to put $4 billion in aid pledged for tsunami survivors to
work on Thursday, the urgency of their task conveyed in a chilling warning that
the death toll could double without quick action to prevent disease.
![Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao (L) sits with Australian Prime Minister John Howard (R) and Canadian Foreign Minister Pierre Pettigrew (C) during the opening of the Special Asean Leaders' Meeting on Aftermath Quake and Tsunami Summit at the Jakarta Convention Centre January 6, 2005. Global leaders gathering in Jakarta to discuss the tsunami that devastated countries around the Indian Ocean will try to draw lessons from the disaster, including looking at a future warning system. [Reuters]](xin_270102061346273167318.jpg) Chinese Premier Wen
Jiabao (L) sits with Australian Prime Minister John Howard (R) and
Canadian Foreign Minister Pierre Pettigrew (C) during the opening of the
Special Asean Leaders' Meeting on Aftermath Quake and Tsunami Summit at
the Jakarta Convention Centre January 6, 2005.
[Reuters] | U.N. Secretary-General Kofi
Annan appealed at the summit in the Indonesian capital Jakarta for $979
million to be promised to specific projects, covering basic humanitarian needs
for an estimated 5 million people in the next six months.
"What happened on 26 December, 2004 was an unprecedented, global catastrophe.
It requires an unprecedented, global response," he said, calling it the largest
natural disaster the world body had faced.
Governments around the world have pledged $3.7 billion in aid so far and
private groups or individuals another $630 million.
Aid workers have yet to reach large parts of Aceh, a province of 4 million
people on the northern tip of Indonesia's Sumatra island, because the gargantuan
waves destroyed roads, bridges and ports.
They fear the overall death toll, now around 145,000 from the strongest
earthquake in 40 years and the tsunami it spawned, could climb higher when they
do get to these parts.
The summit in Indonesia, focusing on longer-term aid now that the global
relief effort is in full swing, was also set to endorse debt relief to help
nations rebuild, and back a warning system to save lives in the future.
 Indonesian
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono(R) greets U.N. Secretary-General Kofi
Annan at the Jakarta Convention Centre January 6, 2005.
[Reuters] | It opened amid extraordinary security
with a minute of silence for the victims.
The World Health Organization (WHO) warned before the summit that access to
safe drinking water remained inadequate, encouraging diarrhoeal diseases such as
cholera and dysentery.
"If basic needs ... are not urgently restored to all populations by the end
of this week, WHO fears that outbreaks of infectious disease could result in a
similar number of fatalities as occurred due to the direct impact of the
tsunami," it said.
LIKE A NIGHTMARE
Annan said the catastrophe was "like a nightmare from which we are still
hoping to awaken."
It was all too real for millions in 13 affected countries and for tens of
thousands of relatives of foreign tourists from 40 countries who are dead or
missing following the disaster.
"From the nameless fishing villages of Sumatra to the modern tourist resorts
of Thailand; from the beaches of Sri Lanka and India to the coastal communities
of the Maldives and Somalia; the disaster was so brutal, so quick, and so
far-reaching that we are still struggling to comprehend it," Annan said.
He told reporters that as big swathes of Sumatra had not been surveyed, the
toll was likely to climb, adding: "We may never know how many people actually
died."
US Secretary of State Colin Powell, Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi
and Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao were among a score of other leaders at the
summit.
Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, in an opening speech, called
for a tsunami warning system in the Indian Ocean, similar to one long
established in the Pacific.
Koizumi said Japan was willing to freeze debt payments for countries hit by
the tsunami.
![U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan (L) delivers a speech during the opening of the Special Asean Leaders' Meeting on Aftermath Quake and Tsunami Summit at the Jakarta Convention Centre January 6, 2005. World leaders met on Thursday to discuss tsunami aid, the task's urgency underlined by a chilling warning that the death toll could double to about 300,000 without swift action to prevent diseases. [Reuters]](xin_49010206141511607408.jpg) U.N.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan (L) delivers a speech during the opening of
the Special Asean Leaders' Meeting on Aftermath Quake and Tsunami Summit
at the Jakarta Convention Centre January 6, 2005. World leaders met on
Thursday to discuss tsunami aid, the task's urgency underlined by a
chilling warning that the death toll could double to about 300,000 without
swift action to prevent diseases. [Reuters] | "The
affected nations were hit by a huge disaster which may strike only once in 100
years ... a debt moratorium for a certain period is necessary and I would like
to urge other nations to do so," he said.
Powell said a "core group" set up on Dec. 29 by the United States, Japan,
India and Australia to coordinate tsunami relief was being disbanded and folded
into U.N.-led operations.
Indonesia said almost 100,000 people had been counted dead so far and 600,000
people in worst-affected Aceh were now homeless -- up from the last estimate of
half a million.
MORE AFTERSHOCKS
Fresh tremors in Aceh's capital Banda Aceh sent the hungry and homeless
running in panic -- the latest of dozens of aftershocks since the 9.0 magnitude
undersea earthquake, about 150 km (100 miles) offshore, triggered the tsunami.
As the smell of rotting corpses again hung over the city hundreds queued
outside a makeshift aid station, once Banda Aceh's flashiest shopping mall,
waiting for it to open.
When a tremor shook the old mall everyone scattered, running up the street,
jumping on motorbikes, crying, fearing another killer wave. But the queue
quickly re-formed.
"We don't have anything. Everyone is like this, the rich and the poor. Now
everybody has to queue," said Yusri.
 A view of the
Special Asean Leaders Meeting on Aftermath of Earthquake and Tsunami at
the Covention Centre in Jakarta January 6, 2005. Global leaders gathering
in Jakarta to discuss the tsunami that devastated countries around the
Indian Ocean will try to draw lessons from the disaster, including looking
at a future warning system. [Reuters] | Much of the city has been looted, and people are forced to scavenge among the
rubble, littered with dozens of boats tossed from the sea, as Indonesian troops
patrol the streets.
"This is more than a curse," said Sudirman, a butcher and one of the very few
people to reopen a business. "Allah is very angry. And we must be resolute."
After getting a bird's-eye view of Aceh's battered coastline on Wednesday,
Powell promised more helicopters, food and clean water for isolated survivors of
the tsunami.
"I have been in war and I have been through a number of hurricanes, tornados
and other relief operations, but I have never seen anything like this," said
Powell, who served in Vietnam and rose to be his country's military chief.
U.S. helicopters are flying dozens of missions a day to the devastated west
coast of Sumatra, air-dropping supplies.
U.N. emergency relief coordinator Jan Egeland said that the United Nations
(news - web sites) needed to plan on caring for as many as 800,000 tsunami
survivors in Indonesia alone for the next year.
U.N. officials said orphaned or lost children might fall prey to criminal
gangs bent on selling them into slavery.
At an orphanage in southern India, 15-year-old Sitha, her sister Sitha
Lakshmi, 10, and 8-year-old brother Amitha grappled with the loss of their
parents.
"I'm the head of the family now," Sitha said, holding back tears. "I have to
look after them. Mummy wanted them to get educated and I have to make that
happen now."
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