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Military searches for bodies, brings aid to Samoas
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 02 - 10 - 2009

Some frightened Samoans who fled to
the hills as a tsunami tore through their seaside villages
vowed never to return to the coastline, while aid workers
delivered water and medicine amid the growing stench of
decay, AP reported.
Grieving survivors began to bury their loved ones, while
others gathered under a traditional meeting house to hear a
government minister discuss plans for a mass funeral and
burial next week.
The death toll from Tuesday's earthquake and tsunami rose
to 169 Thursday as searchers found more bodies in Samoa,
where 129 were confirmed dead, police commissioner Lilo
Maiava told The Associated Press. Another 31 were killed in
the U.S. territory of American Samoa and nine in Tonga.
Maiava said drowning appeared to be the main cause of
death, and some bodies were still being plucked from the
sea. Police dug others from sand, mud and debris. Maiava
said the search for bodies could continue for another three
weeks.
A refrigerated freight container was used as a temporary
morgue for the scores of bodies at a Samoan hospital.
The United States, Australia and New Zealand sent in
supplies and troops, including a U.S. Navy frigate carrying
two helicopters for search-and-rescue efforts. The Hawaii
Air National Guard and U.S. Air Force flew three cargo
planes to American Samoa carrying 100 Navy and Army guard
personnel and reservists.
Many residents who raced up hillsides as the tsunami
closed in remained too scared to return to their villages.
More headed to the hills Wednesday night after an
aftershock shook the region.
«It's a scary feeling, and a lot of them said they are
not coming to the coastal area,» Red Cross health
coordinator Goretti Wulf said near the flattened village of
Lalomanu on the devastated south coast of Samoa's main
island, Upolu. «The lesson they learned has made them stay
away.»
Workers at Lalomanu's makeshift emergency supply base
began carting water, food, tarps and clothes to 3,000
people in the hills.
Wulf said drinking water was the most pressing problem. It
is the end of Samoa's dry season, when rain is scarce, and
the water pipes that supply the villages were destroyed.
Military vehicles brought food, water and medicine and
medical teams gave tetanus shots and antibiotics to
survivors with infected wounds.
Many survivors wore face masks to reduce the growing
stench of rot.
Samoan government minister Fiana Naomi asked around 400
grieving relatives for permission to hold a mass funeral
next Tuesday. She said the government would provide free
coffins for the 103 bodies in the morgue.
She said other bodies had already been buried due to
advanced decomposition.
One family in Lalomanu held a burial Thursday, placing
seven relatives aged 2 to 55 in a single, hastily dug
grave. One body had been retrieved from the ocean only
hours earlier. A young mother, Sina Edmund Taufua, kissed
the cheeks of her dead son and daughter, ages 6 and 5, at
the edge of the grave as her bandaged arm was supported by
a relative.
The family dead were buried without coffins, their bodies
covered with a woven mat, during a service that blended
traditional Samoan culture with a Christian church
ceremony.
They were buried next to the fresh graves of the family
patriarch and a 7-year-old relative _ other victims of the
tsunami who were buried Tuesday.
With 13 relatives dead, the Taufua clan believes they are
among the worst affected by the disaster.
«I'm not sure the word 'shock' fully describes our sense
of loss,» relative Ben Taufua said. «Nothing makes sense
at all. ... The beach where all of this happened, all those
lives were lost, it was paradise on Earth.»
The Samoas, which lie about halfway between New Zealand
and Hawaii, have breathtaking scenery. Majestic beaches
give way to volcano-carved mountainsides and tropical
forests are dotted with taro and coconut farms.
Before the disaster struck, the majority of the population
in American Samoa lived below the poverty line. Tourism,
along with tuna canneries and coconut plantations,
represent the bulk of economic activity.
New Zealanders Joseph Bursin and Nicky Fryar said they
scrambled to reach high ground as the tsunami surged toward
their beachfront vacation resort in Samoa. Their sandals
were slipping off as they sprinted up a rock-covered hill
and climbed over a lagoon full of mud.
They remember the noise _ the roar of the water, the
clanging of metal roofing smashing against cars, the sound
of buildings collapsing.
«We had about 15 or 20 seconds before the water came in
underneath us,» Bursin said. «There were people behind us
who didn't make it and were taken by the water.»
In nearby Tonga, National Disaster Management Office
deputy director Alfred Soakai said 90 percent of the
buildings on the northern island of Niuas were washed away,
with the local hospital destroyed.
Villagers in Niuas on Thursday received their first relief
supplies of food, water, clothing, tarps and some bedding.
Four seriously injured villagers were flown to a hospital
in the capital, Nuku'alofa.


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