Thailand's Tsunami Death-Toll Rising
Thailand's Tsunami Death-Toll Rising
By Richard S. Ehrlich
BANGKOK, Thailand Bloated corpses floated off the coast and littered Thailand¹s beaches on Tuesday (Dec. 28) where the government said more than 1,500 people, many of them foreign tourists, drowned and 1,000 disappeared after Asia¹s underwater earthquake sucked countless victims out to sea.
Rescuers tied ropes to stiff, jutting legs and arms of
drifting bodies and yanked them onto small boats, or waited
until the tide brought them to shallow water where groups of
grim-faced men lifted and carried them away.
Many
of the dead appeared clad in swimming gear or walking shorts
and T-shirts -- their flesh burnt by the tropical sun and
decaying in the salt water -- but lacking identification
papers.
The government "put the number of dead at
1,516, with 8,432 more people injured" along the west coast,
the official Thai News Agency reported on Tuesday (Dec. 28).
"But in Phang Nga [province], which has already
recorded 950 deaths, rescue workers said that there were
still around 1,000 more bodies which they had not yet been
able to reach," the report said.
Sunday¹s (Dec.
26) earthquake under the Andaman Sea caused tidal waves
which also left "over 1,000 still missing" elsewhere along
Thailand¹s tourist-packed coast, the agency said.
Officials expected the death toll to climb.
The
950 dead in coastal Phang Nga province included "the corpses
of 750 Thais and foreigners" in Takua Pa district, the
agency said.
Takua Pa district includes Khao Lak
beach, a scuba divers¹ shallow, reef-encrusted paradise
popular with foreign backpackers and wealthy Thais.
Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra earlier said "600 to 700
corpses had been discovered in the Phang Nga tourist resort
of Khao Lak alone," the agency said.
Rescuers
discovered decomposing corpses strewn along the
granite-studded, sandy beaches of Khao Lak and its
estuaries, mangroves and sea cliffs.
An estimated
"60 percent of the bodies were foreigners", at Khao Lak,
about 50 miles (80 kilometers) north of devastated Phuket
island, the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) reported
on Tuesday (Dec. 28).
Some of the dead hung from
trees after rising water perched them in branches, according
to eyewitnesses and reporters who reached Khao Lak.
Babies and body parts were discovered rotting in the sand.
Some of Khao Lak¹s corpses were taken to a
makeshift morgue inside a Buddhist temple because most
buildings were smashed to smithereens.
A gray Thai
police boat and a crumpled public bus lay among crushed
trees and other debris inland after being washed ashore,
according to pictures in the first available video filmed at
the site.
Thailand¹s king and royal family grieved
the loss of the monarch¹s grandson, Poom Jensen, 21, who
despite suffering autism was water-skiing along Khao Lak¹s
shore when huge waves hit.
Mr. Jensen¹s body was
found after a frantic search, but his four palace-appointed
bodyguards survived.
The Health Ministry sent 20
refrigerated shipping containers to the region to collect
and store hundreds of decomposing bodies, amid hopes that
they might be identified by relatives, officials said.
People who were rescued on Tuesday (Dec. 28) along
Thailand¹s lengthy, ravaged west coast included many whose
lacerations and other injuries were dangerously infected
because they had gone without medical treatment since
Sunday¹s (Dec. 26) earthquake.
Doctors amputated
limbs too diseased or crushed to save, after tidal waters
slammed people against walls, cars and other sharp objects.
"What is terrible is that some [Thai] rescue
officials dare not enter in the [devastated] spots following
warnings of aftershocks," Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra
said on Tuesday (Dec. 28) before attending an emergency
cabinet meeting.
"Some wounded people run to hills
and refuse to come down for medical treatment because they
remain frightened" of more tsunamis which may batter the
coast again, the prime minister said.
"It¹s also
difficult to find victims in some spots because
communications and transportation routes are cut off."
Thai military and other services in boats and
helicopters also plucked corpses and survivors from
tourist-friendly beaches near wealthy Phuket island,
including tiny Phi Phi island which featured in "The Beach"
film starring Leonardo DiCaprio.
Rescuers entered
the wreckage of the two remaining hotels on Phi Phi island
and searched room by room for bodies of Thais and foreigners
who did not escape the quake¹s hell and high water.
Other devastated coastal provinces include Phang Nga, Krabi,
Trang, Ranong and Satun all famous for palm-fringed beaches
and resort facilities which ranged from five-star to dirt
cheap.
American, European and other diplomats
updated their lists of dead, missing and injured nationals
amid speculation that their tolls were hopelessly incomplete
because December is the prime holiday season for
winter-chilled foreigners to thaw out and suntan on
Thailand¹s gorgeous beaches.
Many foreigners who
died in Phuket and elsewhere included fragile, elderly
retirees who thought they would enjoy the time of their
lives during a Christmas and New Year holiday in this
Southeast Asian land fabled for its warmth, hospitality,
cuisine and Buddhist culture.
The dead also
apparently included foreign backpackers who flocked to "full
moon party" beach celebrations during which some people
dance, take illegal Ecstasy, psychedelic mushrooms and other
drugs, and go slumming in cheap, flimsy rooms built of
thatch and wood.
Some of this year¹s advertised,
Christmas season, full moon "raves" took place the night
before the Sunday (Dec. 26) morning earthquake.
All along the stricken coast, Thai and foreign survivors
told horrific tales of how they were trapped in beachside
hotel rooms or other dwellings, by overwhelming waves of
water which quickly filled their rooms to neck level.
Some people said they were swept from hotel rooms,
restaurants, streets and shops into a swelling, surging
torrent of blackish liquid which heaved them against sharp
pieces of metal wreckage and broken furniture, gouging and
slicing their bodies as they floundered.
Survivors
were able to cling to tree branches, floating automobiles
and other debris until nearby Thais and foreigners pulled
them to safety.
On tourist-packed Phuket island,
where opulent resorts, spas and other facilities cater to
the world¹s wealthiest tourists alongside budget travelers
and locals, the streets of crowded Patong Beach were blocked
with smashed cars piled one on top of another, in front of
bashed shops and bars.
A stench from a
supermarket¹s basement on Phuket island, 430 miles south of
Bangkok, led rescuers to discover several corpses of
shoppers and staff who drowned when the lower floor suddenly
flooded from onrushing waves.
Richard S.
Ehrlich, a freelance journalist who has reported news from
Asia for the past 26 years, is co-author of the non-fiction
book, "HELLO MY BIG BIG HONEY!" -- Love Letters to Bangkok
Bar Girls and Their Revealing Interviews. His web page is
http://www.geocities.com/glossograph/