Bukan, istilah yang tepat bukan "mobbing", melainkan
memeluk melepaskan kerinduan antara dua saudara yang
sering saling salah paham.

Salam,
RM 

------------------------------------ 
 
Tsunami Survivors Mob U.S. Aid Copters 

25 minutes ago 

By DENIS D. GRAY, Associated Press Writer 

ABOARD THE USS ABRAHAM LINCOLN - Desperate, homeless
villagers on the tsunami-ravaged island of Sumatra
mobbed American helicopters carrying aid Saturday as
the U.S. military launched its largest operation in
the region since the Vietnam War, ferrying food and
other emergency relief to survivors across the
disaster zone. 
   
>From dawn until sunset on New Year's Day, 12 Seahawk
helicopters shuttled supplies and advance teams from
offshore naval vessels while reconnaissance aircraft
brought back stark images of wave-wrecked coastal
landscapes and their hungry, traumatized inhabitants. 

"They came from all directions, crawling under the
craft, knocking on the pilot's door, pushing to get
into the cabin," said Petty Officer First Class
Brennan Zwack. "But when they saw we had no more food
inside, they backed away, saying `Thank you, thank
you.'" 


"The mob decided how we distributed the food. There
were so many hands outstretched I don't think any
package touched the ground," added Zwack, of Sioux
Falls, S.D. 


The helicopters took off from the aircraft carrier USS
Abraham Lincoln, staged in calm waters about three
miles off the Indonesian province of Aceh along with
four other vessels to launch the sprawling U.S.
military operation. 


More than a dozen other ships were en route to
southern Asian waters, with the USS Bonhomme Richard,
an amphibious assault vessel carrying Marines, headed
for Sri Lanka, which along with Indonesia was the
worst-hit area. The mission involves thousands of
sailors and Marines, along with some 1,000 land-based
troops. 


Governments and global organizations have pledged
about $2 billion in tsunami disaster relief, the
United Nations (news - web sites) said Saturday. Prime
Minister Junichiro Koizumi raised Japan's offer to
$500 million from $30 million, topping President Bush
(news - web sites)'s pledge Friday of $350 million. 


Thailand's Vietnam War-era air base of Utapao has
become the airlift hub for the region. C-130 transport
planes were already conducting sorties to Jakarta and
the Sumatran cities of Medan and Banda Aceh, according
to a statement Saturday by the U.S. Embassy in
Jakarta. 


U.S. Navy (news - web sites) medical staff are also on
the ground in Meulaboh, a decimated fishing village
where several thousand bodies have been recovered. The
Navy is considering a request from Jakarta to
establish a field hospital there. 


As many as 100,000 people are feared dead on Sumatra,
which was closest to the epicenter of last Sunday's
catastrophic quake and tsunami. Although aid has been
piling up in regional airports, officials have had
trouble getting it out to the areas in need and the
U.S. military was expected to ease the bottleneck. 


The Lincoln's operations officer, Cmdr. Matthew J.
Faletti, said the New Year's Day effort off Sumatra
was focused on ferrying emergency relief, including
biscuits, energy drinks and instant noodles, to
communities along the 120-mile stretch of seacoast
south of the city of Banda Aceh. 


Most of the 25,000 pounds of aid supplies delivered
Saturday were picked up from Australian and other
foreign shipments at Banda Aceh and then rushed by the
helicopters to coastal town, where tens of thousands
were killed by the giant wall of water. 


U.S. military medical and damage assessment teams were
also landed with helicopters flying in heavy winds,
rain and low clouds. Supplies had to be dropped from
craft hovering over some water-logged areas where
landing proved impossible. 


"There is nothing left to speak of at these coastal
areas," said Lt. Cmdr. Jeff Vorce, a pilot from San
Diego, California. The tsunami left a swath of
destruction as deep as two miles inland, with trees
mowed down like grass and the only evidence of
buildings in many communities the bare foundations,
pilots said. 


Many residents were camped out on high ground, either
afraid to return to the seacoast or having nothing to
return to. 


The town of Meuloboh, where some 50,000 people had
once lived, was about 80 percent destroyed, Faletti
estimated. 


The pilots encountered a number of foreign and
Indonesian aid workers but distribution of supplies
was difficult since the vital coastal road, most
bridges and two small airports near Meuloboh had been
washed away. "It looks like the sheer force of the
water buckled the road from underneath," Vorce said. 


Officers said information was being gathered on how
best American resources could be used including the
skills of machinists, masons, carpenters, divers and
general laborers among the more than 6,000 crew
members on the giant carrier. 

"Everyone is champing at the bit to go out and help,"
said Vorce. "Today wasn't about a paycheck." 


The Associated Press


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