Bureaucracy in tsunami hit Aceh, Indonesia back in action
7/1/2005 15:09
The Indonesia's Aceh provincial governor office recommenced its activities,
nearly two weeks after tsunami disaster hit the province on Dec. 26, media
reported on Friday. The office operates with less employees, as the fate of
some 900 officials remains unknown. The Indonesian home affairs ministry has
also assigned a number of middle-ranking officials to support the administration
in the province. Deputy Governor of Aceh province Azwar Abubakar was quoted
by the Jakarta Post daily as saying that the resumption of the administration's
activities would help the oil and gas-rich province return to normal
life. "Thank God, some 60 percent of the office building can be used (for
work)," he said, referring to the Aceh gubernatorial office in the provincial
capital, which is located some 6 kilometers away from the coast. Elsewhere in
Banda Aceh, the capital of the province, the number of motorcycles and cars on
the capital's main roads has started to increase. Several markets, shops and
coffee stalls reopen, attracting crowds. Meanwhile, volunteers and soldiers
continue their efforts to evacuate bodies. According to an official in Aceh
province, as many as 74,666 bodies had been buried as of Thursday
morning. Indonesian Coordinating Minister for People's Welfare Alwi Shihab
predicted more dead victims under building debris and logs in several locations
in the city that had not yet been touched. Shihab said the government also
decided to increase ferry trips between Singkil in nearby North Sumatra and
Simelue island from twice a week to three times a week in a bid to distribute
aid to the island, which was located the closest to the epicenter of the
8.7-magnitude earthquake.
Xinhua
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