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Warning
systems set up across
Asia after tsunami disaster |
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TON SAI, Thailand -
Two tsunami warning towers now dot the skyline in the
idyllic vacation village of Ton Sai on Thailand's Phi Phi
island - a welcome sight, according to 35-year-old shopowner
Fatima Thamnakla.
"If it happens again, it will be better than last time," she
tells AFP, pointing out the towers on the tourist beach and
near the village mosque.
But she adds matter-of-factly: "We won't know how well the
warning system works until it happens again." When giant
waves unleashed by a violent under-sea earthquake crashed
onto the shores of 11 Indian Ocean countries last year, many
governments had no way to warn the public of the imminent
danger, leading to the massive death toll of around 217,000.
Forewarned, many of the victims could have fled to the
safety of higher ground when the three-metre-high waves
swept inland.
From Indonesia to India, those countries blindsided by the
tsunami have since launched efforts to avert a repeat,
setting up warning systems, improving cross-border
coordination and increasing community awareness.
The national emergency plans being put in place are meant to
supplement international efforts led by the United Nations
to set up a regional early warning system similar to that
already used in the Pacific.
Top scientists and government officials from over 25 nations
have been meeting this week in Hyderabad, India, to disucss
progress on the regional system which it is hoped will be
implemented next year.
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Individual countries,
meanwhile, have been busy making their own plans.
In mid-November, Indonesia set in motion the initial phase
of its early warning system, activating two sets of moored
surface buoys off western Sumatra to pick up and transmit
data about sea tremors from ocean floor sensors.
The instruments were the first of a total of 15 sets, along
with more than 100 seismographs, due to be installed along
the coast of the vast archipelago - the country hardest hit
by the December 26, 2004 tragedy.
Information will be conveyed via satellite to a monitoring
station in West Sumatra province, from which it will be
relayed to the public via mobile text message, e-mail, fax
and telephone.
"The more instruments we have, the better it will be," Edi
Prihantoro, an official at the Indonesian research and
technology ministry, said last month.
Thailand set up the National Disaster Warning Center in May
2005 to deal with both the aftermath of the tsunami and to
ward off future catastrophes, and the country's early
warning system will soon be in place.
The government is due to install warning towers in Phuket by
year's end, with another 32 towers scheduled to be set up
along the country's Andaman coast by March.
"I think in terms of preparedness, Thailand is doing
extremely well," says Poonam Khetrapal Singh, the World
Health Organization's deputy regional director for Southeast
Asia.
"In fact, they have the best preparedness plan already.
Other countries are also following Thailand's example." -(AFP)
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