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Searchers comb wreckage for Samoan tsunami dead
Saleapaga, Samoa (AFP) Oct 5, 2009 Search teams combed the jumble of smashed houses and ripped foliage Monday in their search for human remains nearly a week after a tsunami devastated Samoa and neighbouring islands. Seven people remain missing in Samoa and another two in neighbouring American Samoa following last Tuesday's tsunami, which crashed into the South Pacific islands following an 8.3-magnitude earthquake. A total of 136 people have been confirmed dead in Samoa -- after a body was found near Saleapaga village on Sunday -- another 32 in American Samoa and nine in the northernmost islands of Tonga. Samoan, Australian and New Zealand searchers with specially trained dogs searched Monday in Saleapaga village and surrounding areas. The region on the south coast of the most populated Samoan island of Upolu was the hardest hit in the tsunami and was popular with foreign holidaymakers, at least 13 of whom were killed by the churning waves. The head of the Australian search team Steve Smith said they were combing the area for a final time before his team pulled out of the search. "Basically we are just finishing off some searching in this particular area where people still aren't accounted for," Smith told AFP. "If we can't find (the missing) in these areas that we have searched, the assumption is that they've been washed out to sea," he said. Smith said his party had recovered five bodies since Wednesday and recent discoveries were mostly just body parts "because of the sheer forces involved" in the tsunami. Using probes and shovels, searchers moved along the beach at nearby Lotogaga village, where a human leg was reportedly found on Saturday. Search coordinator for the New Zealand police, Paul Manhire, said they were searching near where people were reported to be when the waves came crashing ashore. "We don't know whether they have washed out to sea or are buried deep under debris," he said. The Samoan government is organising a mass funeral for up to 100 victims at a sports complex in the capital Apia on Thursday. But many families were following the local tradition of burying their dead in family plots near their homes, even now when those houses have been swept away by the tsunami. In Lalomanu village, So'o Lefale's family was preparing to bury nine members of their extended family, including seven children aged under five, around their former home. "This is my home, my family has always been here. We want to bury our family here with our relatives," she told AFP. Lefale said she was still struggling to come to terms with the scale of the disaster and feared for the future. "So many have died, I just can't count them. No one is safe," she said. She said she planned to rebuild the family home near the beach, despite her fear and the desire of most people in the village not to remain near the sea. "When I live here will there be another wave? I just can't sleep at night." Samoan Red Cross spokeswoman Rosemarie North said the vast majority of those who had fled as far as four kilometres (two and a half miles) inland after the tsunami did not want to return to the coast. She said the relief effort was concentrating on ensuring those who had moved inland were supplied with shelter, clean water and sanitation. "We're making sure people have bush knives, hammers and nails and spades so can build latrines and temporary shelters," she said. Share This Article With Planet Earth
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Samoan tsunami tests lessons learned in 2004 Asian disaster Apia (AFP) Oct 4, 2009 When Sister Doris Barbero heard the church bells ringing after a frightening earthquake near her seaside school in Samoa, she knew to gather her young students and run for higher ground. "We have done this drill before. We knew what we had to do, we had to leave the premises and go up to the hills," the nun told AFP from her school in Leava'a in the devastated southwest of the Pacific nation ... read more |
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