Moms & Dads,

Situasi di Sri Langka sama dengan di Aceh, bantuan terlambat
datang sebab rusaknya infrastruktur oleh Tsunami. Perang 
saudara juga sedang terjadi di Sri Langka, tapi pihak pemberontak
(Tamil) bahu-membahu bekerja sama dengan pemerintah dalam
operasi kemanusiaan. 

Semoga bisa menjadi cerminan bagi GAM (Pemerintah/TNI sendiri
sudah menyatakan gencatan senjata sepihak.)

Rgds.,
Erik

Berikut beritanya (ma'af berbahasa Inggris!)

Amid Chaos, Sri Lankans Are Struggling to Survive
By SETH MYDANS
Published: December 30, 2004 -- www.nytimes.com

------------------------------------------------------------
"We only want food and milk. We are not asking for
everything. But our babies have no milk to drink."
------------------------------------------------------------

NILAVELI, Sri Lanka, Dec. 29 - His home gone, his family
shivering and hungry, everything he owned swept out to sea,
Velu Kannan wandered down a lonely road on Wednesday
looking for a pen.

Stagnant salt water lay in the fields around him,
reflecting a gray sky. In his hands he carried a piece of
cardboard he had found among the debris.

"I need somebody to help me write 'Refugee Camp,' " he said.
"All the cars drive past us. Nobody knows we are here."

Mr. Kannan and his family fled their fishing village when
it was destroyed on Sunday and took refuge with 10 other
families on a hillside where they hoped to be safe if giant
waves crashed in again from the sea. Now he needed to
survive.

All along the shoreline here in Trincomalee district on the
hard-hit eastern coast of Sri Lanka, small groups have
found shelter in schools, temples, vacant buildings or
makeshift tents, kept alive by small donations from private
convoys of trucks and vans.

"What we need is clothes," said Wasantakumari Sridhar, 35,
who was camped by the side of the road under a tarpaulin
with two other women, three men and nine children. "Our
homes have become mud. Everything we had is gone."

Not far down the road, in the shelter of a half-built
gasoline station, Pasida Muhamad said: "We only want food
and milk. We are not asking for everything. But our babies
have no milk to drink."

The death toll in Sri Lanka continued to climb Wednesday
past 22,000 as more bodies were pulled from debris or
floated ashore with the tides, to be quickly buried. At the
same time, a new potential disaster approached as up to two
million people remained homeless without adequate food,
water, sanitation and medical care.

Some, like the families along the road here in Nilaveli,
were receiving small handouts. Others, like the villagers
north of the broken bridge at Kuchchaveli or farther south
on the sand bars near Batticaloa, remained beyond the reach
of aid.

"It's a mess," said Patrick Walder, who heads the office of
the International Committee of the Red Cross here in
Trincomalee. "The problem is disorganization. There are
many agencies and they are not coordinated. The government
is not coordinating. Some of the district offices are wiped
out so we have nothing to work with."

Private banks are running out of money, he said. Fuel and
medicine are running short. There is an immediate need for
the basics of food and shelter. If disease begins to spread,
as many people fear, medical care will become urgent.

In the initial division of labor, he said, the government
is responsible for food distribution; standard emergency
stockpiles will soon run out. The government has also begun
chlorinating contaminated wells. Large areas must have
electric power restored. Scores of bridges need to be
rebuilt.

Red Cross agencies will provide survival kits that include
sleeping mats, plastic sheeting, plates, cups, buckets,
cooking pans, soap, washing powder and sheets. The first
trucks of supplies began heading here from the capital,
Colombo, on Wednesday.

"The question is, are there enough supplies to meet the
demand?" said John Punter, another official with the
International Committee for the Red Cross. "Are there a
million plastic buckets in Sri Lanka?"

Soon, planeloads of aid will start arriving in Colombo from
abroad, he said. "The first thing is, where do you start?
It's everywhere. It's the whole country. And not only is it
one country, it's six or seven countries over a massive
area."

Sri Lanka's challenges - from survival to subsistence to
the avoidance of epidemics - are only the beginning. In this
poor country of 20 million people, as many as a million or
more now have no way to earn a living.

"What we need is boats," said the men sheltering on the
hillside with Mr. Kannan. Like most of these coastal
refugees, they were fishermen and like most of them, their
boats, nets and motors were swallowed by the ocean that
once fed them.

Once the world has spent millions of dollars on aid to the
victims here and around the region, it is hard to know how
these penniless fishermen will find the means to support
their families again.

In Trincomalee, which was sheltered in a cove from the
worst of the inundation, scores of fishermen have pulled
their boats out of the harbor for safety and they now line
the narrow streets like parked cars.

As a measure of the national trauma here, the disaster
caused by an undersea earthquake measuring a 9.0 magnitude
is now being referred to on television as "9.0, 2004."
Radio stations have begun reading out the names of the
missing, just as desperate families in America posted
photographs of the missing after the attacks of Sept. 11,
2001.

Some people are raising the hope of a silver lining - that
this calamity will help bring together the Tamil and
Sinhalese sides that fought nearly 20 years of civil war
until a fragile cease-fire was declared in 2002.

Mr. Walder of the Red Cross said the Tamil rebels have been
"quite well organized" in bringing relief to areas they
control. The aid group associated with them, the Tamil
Rehabilitation Organization, has been cooperating well with
the government, he said.

In Trincomalee, Sunday's natural disaster struck an area
that had been torn apart by fighting for years. Along the
Nilaveli road, buildings knocked askew by the ocean stand
side by side with the rubble of buildings destroyed by war.

The turbulent waves robbed a nearby military base of its
weapons just as Tamil raiders had done in the past and
scattered buried land mines back into areas that had been
cleared since the cease-fire.

On the grounds of the ruined Nilaveli Hotel, cars hung from
trees along with bits of clothing, a dead goat and a head
of cabbage.

Foam hissed up the quiet beach and the ocean stretched to
the horizon, placid and glittering, almost smug after this
demonstration of its power.



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AYO GALANG SOLIDARITAS UNTUK MEMBANTU KORBAN MUSIBAH DI ACEH & DAN SUMATERA 
UTARA !!!
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