| Tent
City in Thailand
by Kathryn Reid in southern Thailand
BANGKOK,
11th January 2005: In the aftermath of the tsunami,
more than 1,200 bodies were found in Nam Khem village, said
officials at Bang Muang sub-district administrative offices.
Many of the dead are still stacked in dozens of metal truck
containers beside a Buddhist temple.
A banner out front reads: "Body and Lost Persons Information."
Inside, international volunteers are processing DNA samples.
The bodies are now too decomposed to even differentiate Thais
from tourists.
In the grounds of the Bang Muang government center, a tent
city shelters hundreds of the survivors. As they struggle
to deal with losses and injuries, others have mobilized to
meet their immediate needs.
Volunteers and the military are erecting elevated metal
duplexes for small families and wooden-sided sheds for larger
family units. They are stringing power lines to the temporary
homes. Service companies are preparing hot food and non- governmental
organizations are handing out bags containing soap and personal
items. Under a tent, vocational school students are repairing
motorcycles and appliances. Women pick through huge piles
of donated clothing.
In the spacious entry hall of the administration building
- now piled shoulder-high with donated rice, cooking oil and
other necessities - Khun Chanarong Maharae, administrator,
reads from his notebook. "There were 1,500 households
in Nam Khem that had
deeds to their property; another 1,600 did not," he says.
Rebuilding the village will require an enormous effort, and
reconstructing lives will require much more. "These are
fishermen and they have no boats; they need everything,"
he says.
The waves washed over Nam Khem from two directions, rolling
as far as 3km. from the shore. Boats crashed into houses and
brought snagged trees along with them. Now everything is a
jumble, although whatever can be salvaged is being carefully
removed by survivors. Others turn over shards with sticks
looking for valuables and family mementoes.
You can help the efforts of the
Habitat for Humanity Disaster Response Office by a donation
to the Asia
Tsunami Response Fund.
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