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Sunday, December 26, 2004 (AP)
Largest earthquake in 40 years sends massive tidal waves hitting six Asian 
nations, killing more than 7,000
LELY T. DJUHARI, Associated Press Writer


   (12-26) 07:06 PST JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) --
   The world's most powerful earthquake in 40 years triggered massive tidal
waves that slammed into villages and seaside resorts across southern and
southeast Asia on Sunday, killing more than 7,000 people in six countries.
   Tourists, fishermen, homes and cars were swept away by walls of water up
to 20 feet high that swept across the Bay of Bengal, unleashed by the
8.9-magnitude earthquake centered off the west coast of the Indonesian
island of Sumatra.
   In Sri Lanka, 1,000 miles west of the epicenter, more than 3,000 people
were killed, the country's top police official said. At least 1,870 died
in Indonesia, and 1,900 along the southern coasts of India. At least 198
were confirmed dead in Thailand, 42 in Malaysia and 2 in Bangladesh.
   But officials expected the death toll to rise dramatically, with hundreds
reported missing and all communications cut off to Sumatran towns closest
to the epicenter. Hundreds of bodies were found on various beaches along
India's southern state of Tamil Nadu, and more were expected to be washed
in by the sea, officials said.
   The rush of waves brought to sudden disaster to people carrying out their
daily activities on the ocean's edge: Sunbathers on the beaches of the
Thai resort of Phuket were washed away; a group of 32 Indians -- including
15 children -- were killed while taking a ritual Hindu bath to mark the
full moon day; fishing boats, with their owners clinging to their sides,
were picked up by the waves and tossed away.
   "All the planet is vibrating" from the quake, said Enzo Boschi, the head
of Italy's National Geophysics Institute. Speaking on SKY TG24 TV, Boschi
said the quake even disturbed the Earth's rotation.
   The U.S. Geological Survey measured the quake at a magnitude of 8.9.
Geophysicist Julie Martinez said it was the world's fifth-largest since
1900 and the largest since a 9.2 temblor hit Prince William Sound Alaska
in 1964.
   On Sumatra, the quake destroyed dozens of buildings -- but as elsewhere,
it was the wall of water that followed that caused the most deaths and
devastation.
   Tidal waves leveled towns in the province of Aceh on Sumatra's northern
tip, the region closest to the epicenter. An Associated Press reporter saw
bodies wedged in trees as the waters receded. More bodies littered the
beaches.
   Health ministry official Els Mangundap said 1,876 people had died across
the region, including some 1,400 in the Aceh provincial capital, Banda
Aceh. Communications to the town had been cut.
   Relatives went through lines of bodies wrapped in blankets and sheets,
searching for dead loved ones. Aceh province has long been the center of a
violent insurgency against the government.
   The worst known death toll so far was in Sri Lanka, where a million people
were displaced from wrecked villages. Some 20,000 soldiers were deployed
in relief and rescue and to help police maintain law and order. Police
chief, Chandra Fernando said at least 3,000 people were dead in areas
under government control.
   "It is a huge tragedy," said Lalith Weerathunga, secretary to the Sri
Lankan prime minister. "The death toll is going up all the time." He said
the government did not know what was happening in areas of the northeast
controlled by Tamil Tiger rebels.
   An AP photographer saw two dozen bodies along a four-mile stretch of
beach, some of children entangled in the wire mesh used to barricade
seaside homes. Other bodies were brought up from the beach, wrapped in
sarongs and laid on the road, while rows of men and women lined the roads
asking if anyone had seen their relatives.
   Around one million people were displaced from their homes, Weerathunga
said.
   In India, beaches were turned into virtual open-air mortuaries, with
bodies of people caught in the tidal wave being washed ashore.
   In Tamil Nadu state, just across the straits from Sri Lanka, 1,567 people
were killed, said the state's top elected official, Chief Minister Jayaram
Jayalalithaa.
   Another 200 died in neighboring Andhra Pradesh state, 102 in Pondicherry
and 28 others in Kerala and elsewhere, according to the governments in
each state.
   "I was shocked to see innumerable fishing boats flying on the shoulder of
the waves, going back and forth into the sea, as if made of paper," said
P. Ramanamurthy, 40, who lives in Andra Pradesh's Kakinada town. "I had
never imagined anything like this could happen."
   The huge waves struck around breakfast time on the beaches of Thailand's
beach resorts -- probably Asia's most popular holiday destination at this
time of year, particularly for Europeans fleeing the winter cold -- wiping
out bungalows, boats and cars, sweeping away sunbathers and snorkelers,
witnesses said.
   "Initially we just heard a bang, a really loud bang," Gerrard Donnelly of
Britain, a guest at Phuket island's Holiday Inn, told Britain's Sky News.
"We initially thought it was a terrorist attack, then the wave came and we
just kept running upstairs to get on as high ground as we could."
   "People that were snorkeling were dragged along the coral and washed up on
the beach, and people that were sunbathing got washed into the sea," said
Simon Clark, 29, a photographer from London vacationing on Ngai island.
   On Phi Phi island -- where "The Beach" starring Leonardo DiCaprio was
filmed -- 200 bungalows at two resorts were swept out to sea.
   "I am afraid that there will be a high figure of foreigners missing in the
sea and also my staff," said Chan Marongtaechar, owner of the PP Princess
Resort and PP Charlie Beach Resort.
   Indonesia, a country of 17,000 islands, is prone to seismic upheaval
because of its location on the margins of tectonic plates that make up the
so-called the "Ring of Fire" around the Pacific Ocean basin.
   The Indonesian quake struck just three days after an 8.1 quake struck the
ocean floor between Australia and Antarctica, causing buildings to shake
hundreds of miles away but no serious damage or injury.
   Quakes reaching a magnitude 8 are very rare. A quake registering magnitude
8 rocked Japan's northern island of Hokkaido on Sept. 25, 2003, injuring
nearly 600 people. An 8.4 magnitude tremor that stuck off the coast of
Peru on June 23, 2001, killed 74.

Associated Press reporters Dilip Ganguly and Gemunu Amarasinghe in
Colombo, Sri Lanka, K.N. Arun in Madras, India, and Sutin Wannabovorn in
Phuket, Thailand, contributed to this report.

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Copyright 2004 AP


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