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Picture-Postcard Maldives Struggle to Survive in Tsunami Wake
Space Daily/Agence France-Presse ^ | Dec 29, 2004

Posted on 12/29/2004 9:26:11 PM PST by anymouse

At a makeshift refuge camp in the capital Male, a teenager vows never to go back to his tiny coral island after Sunday's deadly tsunami lashed the equatorial nation, killing at least 55 people. Before the disaster struck, the Maldives were the picture-postcard tropical paradise many well-heeled people dreamed about, with coconut palms leaning over crystal-clear lagoons and coral reefs promising great snorkelling and diving.

Now a state of emergency has been declared, throwing the classic desert islands into crisis after they were deluged by the freak waves that crippled large swathes of Asia.

While the tourist industry has been shaken to its core, local residents are also hurting from the tragedy triggered by an undersea earthquake on Sunday off the Indonesian coast.

"I will never go back to Dhiffushi," vowed Fazleen, 14, who lost not only his home, but the island he was brought up in which will have to be rebuilt from scratch.

The tiny low-lying coral atoll is now "uninhabitable" and he must look for another, this time with higher ground and drinking water.

"There may be more waves. I feel safer here in Male," he said pointing to the higher ground and a Japanese-built break water around the capital, a luxury that does not exist in many of the 202 inhabited islands in the Maldives.

Most of them, including the tourist resorts, have been devastated.

"There is no life here. There are no homes or buildings standing on Guraidhoo, in South Male atoll," said Ahmed Abdulla, a reporter who travelled to one of the hardest-hit islands in the archipelago.

"Everybody is crying," he said.

Ahmed said there was a stench of rotting fish at Guraidhoo and the vegetation had been destroyed by sea water.

The few residents left on the island told him: "Please let the world know of our fate."

They said two waves struck the island.

The first one was only about four feet high and when it went away, the lagoon emptied as a second wave readied for attack. By then women and children had climbed trees to escape the knockout punch that swept over roof tops.

Finding high ground for safety in the Maldives is no easy task, with the cluster of 1,192 coral islands highly vulnerable to any rise in sea levels.

Knowing they will stand little chance if water levels jump, the country has been a major campaigner on the issue of global warming fearing melting polar ice caps could spell disaster.

But the feared horror hit in another form, with the tidal waves washing away infrastructure.

Scattered some 800 kilometres (500 miles) across the equator, officials said 9,000 island people were homeless with at least 2,000 houses destroyed.

Fleeing to Male was no guarantee of safety, with two thirds of the capital submerged under about four feet (1.2 meters) of water at the height of Sunday's terror.

A man who was opposite the commercial harbour area in Male said he saw the sea suddenly swell and even before he could run towards the centre of the island he saw boats coming towards him.

"Suddenly, there was water up to my neck," he said. "I saw a woman and a child nearby, but I don't know what happened to them."

With foreign tourists fleeing in droves, many vowing never to return, the government is facing its worst ever crisis.

Spokesperson Ahmed Shaheed said the economic damage was estimated at more than 1.3 billion dollars, or twice the tiny Indian Ocean nation's gross domestic product.

He said the main immediate problem was with transport and communications.

"Relief aid efforts have been hampered by this," Shaheed said.

Two Indian air force aircraft carrying food and water have arrived in Male and were helping with the relief effort and three Indian navy ships have also been dispatched, the Indian diplomatic mission here said.

The Maldives had been scheduled to parliamentary elections on Friday, but they have been delayed until January 22.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: atoll; caption; coral; election; emergency; india; island; maldives; photo; picture; postcard; sumatraquake; touristindustry; tsunami
Not a good place to be in a tsunami.

At least the Indians are trying to help these poor folks.

1 posted on 12/29/2004 9:26:13 PM PST by anymouse
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To: anymouse

I've been to the Maldives. I thought it was the most beautiful place on Earth. Now sadly, they will need years to recover.


2 posted on 12/29/2004 9:36:04 PM PST by USMMA_83 (Do onto Muslims as they would most certainly do onto you)
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To: USMMA_83

Fox News was saying today that the many of the Maldives Islands will be declared permanently uninhabitable. Really a sad situation.


3 posted on 12/29/2004 9:51:55 PM PST by Straight Vermonter (Liberalism: The irrational fear of self reliance.)
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To: anymouse; OldFriend; Calpernia; Sub-Driver; Clemenza; Betteboop; firebrand; Freemeorkillme; ...
I never heard of the Maldive Islands until 1987 when a former fugitive (accepted bribes by the Teamsters' Union) NJ Democrat State senator, David Friedland, was finally apprehended hiding out there actually running a successful scuba diving business which is probably why he was caught in the first place.

He posed for an island postcard feeding a shark with a fish from between his teeth!

Petty crafty dude, he had faked his own scuba diving death while vacationing in the Bahamas in 1985 and when caught in the Maldives in 1987 he tried to claim political asylum from Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi!
4 posted on 12/30/2004 4:17:12 PM PST by Coleus (Let us pray for the 110,000 + victims of the tsunami and the 126,000 aborted Children killed daily)
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To: Coleus

A few more tidbits here:



State Sen. David Friedland, Democrat: Perhaps New Jersey's most colorful rogue legislator, Friedland was elected in 1978 after serving in the Assembly from 1966 to 1974.

Once touted as a potential gubernatorial candidate, Friedland was removed from office by a judge in 1980 following his conviction in a kickback scheme involving loans from the Teamsters pension fund he represented as a lawyer.

He was sentenced to seven years in prison but worked hard to delay his prison time by peddling criminal information to police officials.

As jail became inevitable, Friedland faked his own scuba diving death in the Bahamas. He swam two miles underwater to pick up a briefcase loaded with cash and to meet a fisherman who would whisk him to new life.

Friedland hopscotched the world with his girlfriend to stay ahead of the law. He took on the identity of a Greek peach farmer and traveled to Spain and Kenya, where he lived in a tent with a local tribe. He eventually was caught in the Maldives, an island nation in the Indian Ocean, where he ran a popular dive shop.

After two years on the run, he returned to the United States in 1987 and pleaded guilty to a racketeering charge for a 1984 loan scam, similar to his first Teamsters crime.

Friedland eventually served 9 1/2 years in federal prison. He was last known to be living in Florida.



5 posted on 12/30/2004 8:09:11 PM PST by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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