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Bill Frist reports in from Sri Lanka [1-06-05]
Volunteer Political Action Committee.org ^ | 1-06-05 | Bill Frist, Senator

Posted on 01/07/2005 1:37:21 PM PST by Salvation

Thursday, January 6, 2005 11:00pm

Earlier this afternoon in a small village in Sri Lanka I hand-delivered $25,000 from the World of Hope Foundation directly to Dr. A. T. Ariyaratne and his wife, founders of the Sarvodaya Shramadana Movement, which is now one of the most highly regarded indigenous nongovernmental organization in Sri Lanka. It was our first meeting. But he is a saintly man and a legend in the country. Their focus is children and relief and basic human services, with a very special emphasis on self-development and the psychological impact of disaster. I met him outside on a sunny day at one of his orphanages where we had just helped in the delivery of massive amounts of a vital children’s fluid replacement solution called Pedialite donated by Abbott Labs, carried over generously by Tennessee’s own FedEx and supported by The Limited and other US and Sri Lankan companies. As I personally presented the World Of Hope funds on behalf of so many of you (WOH was established this year to respond to public health and disaster crises around the world as a currency of peace through humanitarian and medical assistance and contributed to by many of you -- and I deeply thank you.), I was struck by the warm coming together of so many world and American partners to respond to the evolving disaster, beginning with you and families all across America. What a connected world we really are!

We spent the day in Sri Lanka. I was traveling with Senator Mary Landrieu, a senate leader on issues such as adoption, and my staff Mark and Bob. We caught up with my friend Kenny Isaacs, formerly with Samaritan’s Purse (and with whom I have traveled many times on mission work to Uganda, Sudan, Chad) and now director for foreign disaster assistance with USAID, and visited hundreds of people in three different regions of the country. Sri Lanka is an island country south of India, population about 20 million, the size of West Virginia; it has lost over 30,000 people in the tsunami, with over 100,000 homes totally destroyed and thousands others severely affected. Right now over 800,000 people (who two weeks ago had homes and were living normal lives) have no home -- a third of which are children. And with no home they have no shelter, no jobs, and inadequate access to clean water and sanitation facilities.

At a strained hospital with two children to a bed because of overcrowding, on rounds with the exhausted surgeon I met an 8 year old boy with a leg abscess, infected because he had spent the last 9 days looking for his parents and brothers and sisters (they had died) rather than having his disaster-caused laceration treated early. And across the country at a relief camp for 225 people, waiting in line for medical treatment was a woman, with a crudely bandaged foot, in tears as her 4 year old son frighteningly clutched her hand and leg -- both still in shock having lost the rest of their family. And then there was the US-sponsored (The US Agency for International Development is doing tremendous work as the lead agency for disaster response on the ground) International Red Cross medical team of Sri Lankan doctors and medical students working nonstop in makeshift tents responding to scores of people waiting to be seen to have their lacerations addressed, their dehydration from diarrhea treated, their pneumonia (caused by aspiration of sea water) diagnosed, their psychological trauma alleviated.

At a Muslim-centered community, in front of another crowded relief center where families were living in crowded classrooms with ceilings but no walls, we joined volunteers handing out CARE-sponsored packages of food and supplies to interminable lines of people, again in shock and seemingly so helpless -- but with each bundle we handed off, there was a brief smile, a quick glance upward, and a “thank you” expressed in said and unsaid ways.

One moment I would feel so good and so hopeful about how everyone is pulling together and then the next, depressed. For example, we saw a beautiful orchestration of relief and medical efforts coming together for the 2,200 family members at the Thasim relief center in Katugoda, Galle (on the southwest coast), where we delivered P & G donated Camelbak hydrating units and water purification supplies we brought to such appreciative families). But as we were driving out, a look to the right discovered the fresh site of the mass graves for 517 from the community.

We flew the coastline in a helicopter. What was so remarkable to me was the endless continuity of the destruction. We traveled hundreds of miles of coastline and there is simply no break in the destruction. Railways upended, bridges taken out, total destruction of anything even close to the coastline -- it will take years to rebuild. Speaking of rebuilding, late in the afternoon we went by the embassy where we met 20 marines who had just arrived and were planning their operations as part of the relief efforts underway. The general commanding the operation is Brigadier General Frank Panter from Winchester, Tennessee! I was proud to see him in action as he commands the operation that will oversee more than a hundred of our finest in the humanitarian effort underway. We all have so much to thank our military personnel for all around the world.

We flew over to the second worst hit region in the country, the Ampara district on the east coast, where there are 125 relief camps for the 180,000 people who are without homes. In the coastal village Kalmunai, we visited the hospital (North Base) where I scrubbed up to see the primitive but functional operating room, and we made rounds and met the dedicated nurses and Canadian doctors who had just arrived to assist for the next two weeks. The surgeon there had personally taken care of over 500 people on the day of the disaster. He frantically put out a call for help minutes after the disaster on the internet, his computer within minutes rendered nonfunctional; but his brief email had somehow been picked up by some Scandinavian doctors who miraculously arrived within 48 hours to stand up the entire pediatric response ward. You hear miracle story after story.

One logistical problem that will hit within a week or so is the fact that most of the refugee camps are set up at schools (as well as churches, temples, and mosques) -- like the Kalmunai camp for displaced Tamils we visited which occupied Wesley School. The 420 homeless occupants will be displaced again (I don’t know where or how), because school must begin for the children within two weeks. Also, the sanitation facilities at the school relief camps have been a huge challenge. This might be a problem coupled with the lack of clean drinking water -- which in disasters of this magnitude can result in as many of the 50% of the late deaths.

Around the country there are 827 camps like the ones we visited. The S.L. military is taking the lead in the camps. USAID is doing a tremendous job coordinating all for us. USAID has thus far had three major relief flights coming in, supplying 250,000 rolls of plastic sheeting for shelter, three 10,000 liter water bladders, 11,000 water containers, and thousands of blankets. More is on the way. I mentioned the wonderful and inspiring presence of the marines who will help with large debris removal and helicopter airlift to remote areas.

Tonight we met individually with the Prime Minister and the President. We pledged our ongoing US support, for which they are thankful.

Where do you start and where do you end? I guess I can summarize by saying the tragedy is as big as it sounds. The human suffering is ongoing. Our response as a country and as a people has been bold. It is appropriate and it is good. And from my being on the ground I can tell you that the Sri Lankan people are deeply appreciative. There will be more for us to do collectively as a government and as individuals. The reminder is that the world is small and we are all connected.

Time for bed -- jet lag and all. Thanks for putting up with these ramblings.

Bill Frist

 

VOLPAC
Post Office Box 158552
Nashville, TN 37215
Office: (615) 386-0045

Paid for by VOLPAC and not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee.

To visit the VOLPAC website, please click here.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Government; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: frist; humanitarianrelief; physician; senator; southasia; srilanka; sumatraquake; volunteer
Received in an email, but check out the VOLPAC website! It has links to organizations now accepting donations in the South Asia tsunami relief effort.
1 posted on 01/07/2005 1:37:25 PM PST by Salvation
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To: father_elijah; nickcarraway; SMEDLEYBUTLER; Siobhan; Lady In Blue; attagirl; goldenstategirl; ...

Ping for additional information about South Asia relief effort.


2 posted on 01/07/2005 1:38:49 PM PST by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: Salvation

WOW. Great post.


3 posted on 01/07/2005 1:41:26 PM PST by GVnana (If I had a Buckhead moment would I know it?)
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To: GVgirl

These lines hit hard; brings the picture into reality for me.

**We flew the coastline in a helicopter. What was so remarkable to me was the endless continuity of the destruction. We traveled hundreds of miles of coastline and there is simply no break in the destruction. Railways upended, bridges taken out, total destruction of anything even close to the coastline -- it will take years to rebuild.**


4 posted on 01/07/2005 1:43:05 PM PST by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: Salvation

Good site. Thanks for the link.


5 posted on 01/07/2005 1:45:38 PM PST by knittnmom
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To: 80 Square Miles

You are so welcome!


6 posted on 01/07/2005 1:47:16 PM PST by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: Salvation

Frist being a doctor has a special overview of the situation and that is good. Bush sure picks top notch people. Thanks for your post, its so much more informative than the goofy news commentators.


7 posted on 01/07/2005 3:22:02 PM PST by Recovering Ex-hippie (Support our troops!)
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To: Recovering Ex-hippie

"...its so much more informative than the goofy news commentators."
__________________________________
I second that!


8 posted on 01/07/2005 4:22:21 PM PST by eleni121 (January 6 - Happy Epiphany Day to all Orthodox Christians!)
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To: Recovering Ex-hippie

**its so much more informative than the goofy news commentators.**

Definitely!


9 posted on 01/07/2005 8:19:28 PM PST by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: Salvation
so much more informative

With our media it probably would never have been seen ! Thanks, Salvation

10 posted on 01/08/2005 2:20:47 PM PST by ejo
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To: ejo

You're welcome! and another bump for the thread.


11 posted on 01/08/2005 10:20:18 PM PST by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: ejo; eleni121; Recovering Ex-hippie; 80 Square Miles; GVgirl
And more from Frist (now in Iraq) that we won't see on ABCNNBCBS!

Sunday, January 9, 2005
11:30 p.m.

Yesterday was spent in Iraq.

I was last in Iraq seven months ago. Paul Bremer was the administrator then. Prime Minister Allawi (a medical doctor) had just been appointed Prime Minister, but the handover to the Interim Iraqi Government had not yet taken place. Since then there have been many changes -- some very positive, others discouragingly negative.

The most remarkable experience of our journey was the spontaneous appearance we made to join PM Allawi at a "town meeting" of approximately 150 Sunni sheiks. Allawi had invited the sheiks, all from the Sunni triangle, to present their views to him in an open forum; he, in turn, asked us to participate. Most of the Sunnis attending believed (at least at the beginning of the meeting) that the elections scheduled for January 30 should be postponed. They spoke dramatically and painfully of the insurgents' intimidation. They said voter turnout would be low in an election that was already likely to result in a very minor role for Sunnis in the elected government of Iraq. As our Senate delegation of 5 sat before the body on a large sofa alongside the Prime Minister, subjected to the Sheik's spirited and passionate presentations and debates -- and often conflicting views -- from throughout the hall, one couldn't help but to realize how far Iraq had come since the fall of Saddam! This was democracy in action! Unlike before, open debate, freedom of speech, and respectful discourse all played out in the presence of a very patient and respectful prime minister -- a contrast to the intolerant and oppressive days of Saddam Hussein. I doubt the sheiks recognized the contradiction, that while they harangued the U.S. for mistakes we made since Baghdad's fall, they failed to acknowledge the freedoms we brought them. It's still very early and no one can know the ultimate outcome of the elections in Iraq, but Iraq is moving down the road to democracy and freedom, albeit quite violently and haltingly. Halfway through the meeting, an explosion went off, rocking the hall -- apparently a mortar round that landed several meters away in the Green Zone. No one was injured, but it immediately set us into the realities of time and place.

Earlier in the day, we met with the United Nations elections coordinator. Carlos Valenzuela is an impressive man who has participated in 14 elections around the world in a similar capacity. He shared with us his belief that the elections at the end of the month will be "credible" because they would be both independent and consistent with international standards. It's his mission to make that determination, and he thinks this can and will be accomplished. The UN is not running the elections -- the Iraqis are -- but the coordinating role of the UN apparently has been by all counts been constructive and successful to date. The elections will not be pretty, to say the least. Insurgent activity is likely to increase over the coming weeks, and even continue after the elections for a period. But they will, for the first time in recent history, provide an opportunity for the Iraqi people to directly choose their own government; 275 individuals who will make up their assembly and who will ultimately write their constitution and choose their President. The elections are necessary to give legitimacy and responsibility directly to the Iraqi people. I see no reason to postpone the elections. They should go forward. They will go forward. The Iraqi people must speak and take responsibility. The time will never be easy. With those elections, if credible and independent (and only by having the elections can this be tested), terrorists around the world will have been dealt a terrible blow to their goal of creating an ungovernable Iraq open to tyranny and terrorism.

A final major observation from the trip is that real progress is being made by General Dave Petraeus in the training of the Iraqi military and police forces. It seems the plan is a few weeks behind the projected schedule, but given where the Iraqi forces were when I was last in Iraq six months ago, huge advances have been made. The Iraqi military and police now number 127,000 that have been trained and equipped. The quality and quantity are improving. Yes, there remain substantial problems and challenges but again we're moving in the right direction. As these Iraqi forces grow they will continue to assume the responsibilities of ensuring security for the Iraqi people and fighting the insurgents, activities that heretofore have fallen to the coalition and American forces. Over time, Americans and coalition forces will be replaced by these Iraqi soldiers. You see so many unusual and unexpected twists in the road. For example, Iraq is still strictly a cash society. It does not have banks. Every month Iraqi soldiers, by necessity, have to take leave to deliver their wages in cash in person to their families. Unfortunately the terrorists have found this an opportune time to attack the Iraqi soldiers. The terrorists intimidate and assassinate these soldiers indiscriminately. Such peculiar relationships between the banking system, the military, and the insurgents illustrate why at the same time the Iraqi military must be strengthened, the banking system (and all infrastructure) must be built from the bottom up -- all of which takes time and resources and, indeed, change in culture. This is the challenge. On a positive note I was surprised to learn how competitive it is for Iraqis to be admitted to their military and police. There is a long, long line of Iraqis who want to join the military, even in these times when the military personnel are being targeted by the insurgents.

And a final note. I talked to a number of our generals who are on the ground in Iraq right now. Not one of them said there are not enough American or coalition soldiers in Iraq now -- in spite of what the pundits and critics say.

So much more, but time to sign off. Will be meeting with the Prime Minister of India in New Delhi in the morning. A long way away.

Bill Frist

 

OLPAC
Post Office Box 158552
Nashville, TN 37215
Office: (615) 386-0045

Paid for by VOLPAC and not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee.

To visit the VOLPAC website, please click here.

Visit Senator Frist's Senate website at frist.senate.gov (remember to add 'www' to the beginning of the web address)


12 posted on 01/10/2005 1:02:58 PM PST by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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