brad brace contemporary culture scrapbook

September 13, 2007

Tsunami panic hits southern Bangladesh

Filed under: bangladesh,General,global islands,weather — admin @ 6:19 am

CHITTAGONG, Bangladesh — Hundreds of thousands of people in southern Bangladesh fled their homes in panic fearing a tsunami after a major earthquake off Indonesia, officials said on Wednesday.

Local officials said some 600,000 people rushed from coastal regions of the disaster-prone country following a government tsunami warning.

Police with loud-hailers raised the alarm after the 8.4-magnitude earthquake hundreds of miles (kilometres) south in the Indian Ocean.

“Around half-a-million have left their homes. They’ve taken shelter in schools, colleges, cyclone shelters and relatives’ houses,” said Chittagong district administrator Ashraf Shamim.

“There’s a panic but we’re using loudspeakers to ask people to take shelter in safe places.”

An urgent government warning that a tsunami could hit after midnight was repeated frequently by both state and private television and radio stations. It was finally cancelled at 1:30 am Thursday (1930 GMT).

Indonesia, Malaysia, Sri Lanka and India also issued tsunami alerts but cancelled them hours earlier as the threat of giant waves receded.

“We started using loud-hailers at 8:00 pm (1400 GMT) after the government’s order,” said Mahbubur Rahman, police chief of the southern island of Sandweep.

“So far some 70,000 people have been evacuated to cyclone shelters, colleges, schools and government administrative buildings.

“They have left their homes and are huddled together at the centers.”

The US Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre issued an alert for the entire Indian Ocean area including Indonesia, India, Sri Lanka, Thailand and the Maldives — all affected by the devastating December 2004 Asian tsunami.

But the centre said later that the danger had passed.

Bangladesh, a frequent victim of flooding and ferry disasters, escaped the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami which killed 220,000 people in a dozen countries after another massive earthquake off Indonesia’s Sumatra island.

But officials, unwilling to take chances, opened disaster control rooms in the capital and the districts to coordinate the evacuation after Wednesday’s quake.

“The district administrations in the coastal areas have been ordered to open temporary shelters so that people can stay the night there,” said government press spokesman Mahbub Kabir.

Tens of thousands were ordered to take shelter in the southern district of Cox’s Bazar, while ships were ordered to stay close to harbour in Chittagong, home of the country’s largest port.

“It’s massive work. But we are going to take all the people to safe places,” said Chittagong official Shamim.

September 10, 2007

Filed under: Film,General — admin @ 7:18 am

Thousands flee homes as fresh floods hit Bangladesh

Filed under: bangladesh,General,global islands,weather — admin @ 7:17 am

DHAKA – Large swathes of Bangladesh were underwater again on Sunday after heavy rains, adding to the misery of millions hit by flooding that has killed more than 830 people since late July.

Weather officials said that nearly 20 of the country’s 64 districts were flooded after three days of rain swelled major rivers flowing through India into Bangladesh.

At least three people, including a child were drowned, raising the death toll to 833 from monsoon flooding since late July, officials said on Sunday.

Heavy showers caused water logging in the Chittagong port city, disrupting traffic, local residents said.

Hundreds of shanty homes were inundated along the country’s Cox’s Bazar coast as rain and winds set off a “moderate surge” in the Bay of Bengal, meteorology officials said.

The rains have also triggered fresh floods in the Indian states of West Bengal, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Assam, Meghalaya and Arunachal Pradesh, the officials said.

Thousands of Bangladeshi families that returned to devastated homes after the previous flood had receded in most areas were forced to flee again, disaster management officials said.

Witnesses in the northern Gaibandha district said many people had headed to highways and embankments for safety, while others had taken refuge on boats or on the roofs of houses.

The floods covered vast areas in the country’s northeast and southern areas, disrupting communications and, with rains continuing on Sunday, more areas were expected to be engulfed.

The fresh floods inundated newly planted rice and other crops on more than a million hectares.

“The previous floods washed away my house, cattles and crops … but I had started to piece life together,” Gaibandha villager Shahed Ali told reporters. “I managed to replant some seedlings but they have been destroyed again.”

Floods kill hundreds of people and wreck the lives of many more in Bangladesh every year, but this year’s deluge has been the worst since 2004 when floods killed more than 3,000 people.

The Flood Forecasting and Warning Centre (FFWC) in Dhaka said worse could lie ahead because the annual monsoon was still very active in the Ganges, Meghna, and Brahmaputra river basins.

“Experience shows that the floods of late August or September last longer,” said FFWC head Saiful Hossain.

The meteorological department forecast heavy to very heavy rain in various parts of the country over the next 24-48 hours.

Filed under: Film,General — admin @ 6:36 am

Nicaragua says 300 families trapped in mountains after Hurricane Felix

Filed under: General,global islands,nicaragua,weather — admin @ 6:35 am

MANAGUA, Nicaragua — At least 300 families in Nicaragua’s remote northern mountains have been cut off from the rest of the country since Hurricane Felix destroyed all roads into their communities, government officials said Sunday.

Word reached the capital after several villagers hiked three days through forests and over mountains to find help, the civil protection agency said in a news release.

Trapped residents in three communities near the city of Bonanza, about 280 kilometers (180 miles) north of the capital of Managua, are in need of food, water, medicine, clothing and blankets, according to the villagers, who also told authorities that many children are ill.

Bonanza Mayor Manuel Sevilla told Channel 8 television Sunday that the hurricane had ruined crops of bananas, citrus, corn and rice in the region. He asked the government to deliver aid by helicopter.

Felix devastated remote jungle beaches and communities along the Moskito coastline last Tuesday when it struck as a Category 5 hurricane, tearing down homes and killing scores of people.

September 9, 2007

Filed under: Film,General — admin @ 5:30 am

Breaking 10-year silence, China reveals it’s now No 1 arms supplier to Bangladesh

Filed under: bangladesh,General,global islands,india,military,sri lanka — admin @ 5:29 am

While Islamabad remains Beijing’s traditional business partner when it comes to weapons and military equipment, it’s Dhaka that’s emerging as the prime buyer of weapons made in China.

This has been revealed for the first time in 10 years when last week, China submitted a report on its exports and imports of major conventional arms for year 2006 to the United Nations.

And outside South Asia, Africa is China’s new destination for weapons supplies.

This has implications for India. Given that the military holds the levers of power in both Pakistan and now Bangladesh, too, China’s weapons trade brings a new dimension to India’s engagement with its two neighbours.

India’s only defence export between 2000 and 2005 has been the sale of six L-70 anti-aircraft guns to Sri Lanka two years ago. New Delhi never openly admitted to this — wary of domestic political repercussions — but has indicated it in its annual submission to the UN Register of Conventional Arms.

The seven categories on which this reporting is done are battle tanks, armoured combat vehicles, large-calibre artillery systems, combat aircraft, attack helicopters, warships (including submarines) as well as missiles and missile-launchers.

According to its declaration to the UN, China has sold 65 large-calibre artillery systems, 16 combat aircraft and 114 missile and related equipment to Bangladesh last year.

A scrutiny of Bangladesh’s report to the UN also confirms the growing profile of China as its major arms supplier over the last three years.

The 65 artillery systems shown as exports to Bangladesh in China’s report are further sub divided in Dhaka’s import list: 18 122-mm Howitzers and 16 rocket launchers. In 2005, 20 122-mm guns were imported from China.

Besides this, some 200 small arms like pistols and sub-machine guns have been imported along with regular 82-mm mortars.

Interestingly, the other keen supplier to Bangladesh is Pakistan which sold 169 anti-tank Bakhtar Shikan missiles to Bangladesh in 2004.

China’s 1996 record shows that its principal buyers were Pakistan and Iran, which purchased five warships, five combat aircraft and over 100 missiles and missile launchers. A decade later, the profile has changed with Pakistan (10 battle tanks) still on the list as a traditional importer of Chinese equipment. Bangladesh tops the list and the rest of the concentration is in Africa.

China has sold four armoured combat vehicles to Congo, six to Gabon and two to Tanzania. Six combat aircraft each have been exported to Namibia and Zimbabwe. Outside Africa, the one-time large export is to Jordan of 150 large calibre artillery systems.

A decade ago, China stopped providing this information to the UN because US had mentioned Taiwan in a footnote while explaining some of its exports.

An angry China had then remarked that the UN register is a “register of legitimate transfers” and that Taiwan being a “province of China”, any arms transfer between US and Taiwan is “illegitimate”.

With US deciding, of late, to no longer make such a mention in its reports, Beijing last week took a decision to file the arms transfer report as well as tell UN about its military spending.

“In light of the fact that a certain country has stopped providing data on its illegal arms sales to the Taiwan province of China to the UN Register of Conventional Arms, China decides to resume providing annually the data of its imports and exports of conventional arms in the seven categories to the Register from this year,” the Chinese representative in Geneva told relevant UN bodies.

As for its own purchases, China indicates importing two warships from Russia and a little over 1500 missile and missile launching equipment from Russia and Ukraine. There are no other imports in any of the other categories.

Filed under: Film,General — admin @ 5:05 am

Miskito Indians Vent Anger Over Felix

Filed under: General,global islands,nicaragua,weather — admin @ 5:04 am

PUERTO CABEZAS, Nicaragua, Sep 08, 2007 — Hundreds gathered Friday on a beach in a remote jungle region of Nicaragua to mourn the victims of Hurricane Felix and condemn the government for doing too little to search for anyone who might have survived.

Tensions are rising between residents of the autonomous region hit by the storm and the central government as villagers complain they weren’t given enough advance warning about the monster storm and are getting little aid in its aftermath.

A government official refused to give scarce gasoline Friday to 48-year-old Zacarias Loren, whose 19-year-old son was with a group of 18 people diving for lobster off a distant cay when the storm hit.

“These lives are important, too,” Loren said. “They might be floating alive, but they are out there alone.”

One woman, a 19-year-old whose mother had been working on a cay selling food and supplies to lobster fishermen, cried out under the gray sky: “Why did you have to go? Why didn’t you take me with you?”

Disgruntled villagers came together on beach the region’s main town, Puerto Cabezas, which has become the hub of relief efforts and official search missions for any survivors. Others set out on their own to try to find missing loved ones.

The eye of the hurricane passed directly over the Honduran-Nicaraguan coast, devastating seaside villages and island fishing hubs that were home to the Miskito Indians, descendants of Indians, European settlers and African slaves. The region has a long-standing mistrust of the central government, and is reachable only by plane or canoe in good weather.

Survivors from fishing communities off the coast said Nicaraguan authorities sailed by and sent out evacuation warnings only hours before the eye hit. Many lobster divers were already out at sea by then, and the waves and wind were too strong for their primitive sailboats. Hundreds of others were trapped on tiny distant cayes swallowed whole by the violent storm surge.

The death toll has ranged from 49 to more than 100, but no one has been able to tally the missing. It is likely no one will ever know how many lives were lost in the Category-5 storm.

Felix devastated the Miskito Indians’ barrier islands – leaving only a few tree trunks where primitive dwellings once stood and filling the sea with debris. It also ruined the bumpy red-dirt tracks that connected the region’s larger communities, complicating efforts to deliver supplies in the disaster area.

The storm hit during the last two weeks of lobster season, the main source of income for most residents. Hundreds of fishermen and lobster divers, many of whom swim deep to the ocean floor simply by holding their breath, were caught at sea in open boats. Many women who work small businesses on the reefs selling food and supplies to the lobstermen were marooned.

Among them was Aurora Prada, a 39-year-old single mother of five, who said the sea was already wild by the time they received word of the fast-approaching hurricane. She piled into a boat with several others and rode out the storm in a swampy, protected area of the cayes. They spent hours bailing out seawater as bodies floated by, and were eventually rescued by a passing boat.

“The government is partly to blame because they warned us really late,” she said.

Frustrated by the lack of progress, many have searched the sea themselves and buried bodies without notifying authorities. Even some bodies brought back to the rescue effort’s hub in Puerto Cabezas have been put in graves without being identified, making future efforts at separating the missing from the dead nearly impossible.

Miscommunication and mistrust have not helped.

On Friday, authorities said some reports from remote areas turned out to be more rumor than fact. Honduran officials initially reported 150 Nicaraguans had been rescued from the sea. They later adjusted the figure to 52, and emergency chief Marcos Burgos said Friday that he was sure of only 28. He also said a Honduran Indian leader’s report of 25 bodies washing ashore could not be confirmed.

“We know that three or four cadavers were found by Honduran fishermen who notified families of the victims in Nicaragua, and they were supposedly taken to be buried in their hometown, but we can’t confirm that,” he said. “These indigenous people have no borders. For them, Honduras is the same as Nicaragua.

“Afterward, they realized they made a mistake taking the bodies across a border without permission, and now they won’t talk. They won’t say anything to police.”

On Thursday, about 500 people crowded a pier in Puerto Cabezas overlooking a beach where 13 bloated bodies had been laid out on black tarps after being pulled from the sea, their arms reaching for the sky. Some relatives of the missing tried to rush down a small wooden stairway to reach the bodies but were held back by police.

Food, medical help, mattresses and other aid continued to arrive from the U.S., Venezuela and Cuban governments, as well as nonprofits throughout the Americas. But hurricane survivors in villages reachable only by helicopter still lacked food, water and fuel. These communities are used to fending for themselves, but Felix wiped out their crops, wrecked their boats and contaminated drinking water with debris and dead animals.

September 8, 2007

Filed under: Film,General — admin @ 6:47 am

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »

Powered by WordPress