| Home | News| Living in China| MMS | SMS | About us | Contact us|
   
 Language Tips > VOA Normal speed news



Tsunami aid efforts aiming at hardest-hit Aceh region
Peter Heinlein

 

Tsunami aid efforts aiming at hardest-hit Aceh region Listen to this story

The U.N.-led effort to aid tsunami victims iszeroing in onnorthwestern Sumatra, where up to a million people are stillunaccounted for. Officials say they have only asketchypicture of the scope of the devastation.

12 days after the tsunami struck, U.N. officials say they still do not know the fate of hundreds of thousands of coastal villagers in northwestern Sumatra.

Briefing reporters Thursday, emergency relief coordinator Jan Egeland admitted that the massive global aid community is, in his words, "not even close" to having figures of how many people died, how many are missing, and how many more may be living inimprovisedcamps in Aceh, which bore the brunt of the tsunami's force.

"Hundreds of villages wererazed, the people moved from the coast to inland. Along the coast, very few people remain, in the devastation, very few remain because so many were swept away, and the rest have fled towards where there is water, and there is water inland in forest and hills. There may be 200 improvised camps, and there could be hundreds of thousands people there. I've tried to get a definite figure of how many people lived on that coast, and it's hard to get, but it could be a million."

The U.N. relief official expressed fear that his widely used earlier estimate of 150,000 dead from the tsunami could be far too low.

"It will be much bigger. When will anybody want to give that figure? I don't know, I don't think we will be prepared to give a new figure before some time, because it will very much depend on how we can reach the communities on Aceh Sumatra coast that are inland, and start to interview them, but if 20 percent or 30 percent or more of the population was swept away and killed, there are hundreds of thousands of people on the coastline. We could have very, very large figures, we don't know how big."

Mr. Egeland noted the announcement in Jakarta that the core group of aid donors led by the United States has been dissolved and integrated into the U.N.-led aid effort. But he said the core group would continue to provide the bulk of the aid delivery capability.

"We will still keep very close contact with those core group members because they're giving us some of the biggest assistance and have some of the biggest assets on the ground," he said. "Like the U.S., their military assets are the most important assets for big parts of our operation along the Aceh coast now."

Mr. Egeland said that except for Sumatra, aid workers will soon be able to provide blankets, tents, water, food and sanitation to almost all survivors in tsunami-hit areas. He admitted, however, that little can be done to heal the mental scars of those who have lost children, spouses, schools and livelihoods. In that respect, he said, we are not even close.

Vocabulary:

zero in on:(使)瞄准,对……集中火力或注意力

unaccounted for: (某事)未解释清楚的,(某人)找不到的

sketchy: resembling a sketch; giving only major points or parts(粗略的,不完全的)

improvised: 临时准备的,简易的

raze: to level to the ground; demolish(夷为平地,拆毁)

 
Go to Other Sections
Story Tools
 
Copyright by chinadaily.com.cn. All rights reserved

版权声明:未经中国日报网站许可,任何人不得复制本栏目内容。如需转载请与本网站联系。
None of this material may be used for any commercial or public use. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.