The death toll from an earthquake off Indonesia and tidal waves that it
unleashed exceeded 14,000 Monday as officials reported deaths in seven countries
in southern and southeastern Asia.
Sri Lanka was hard hit with 4,813 people confirmed dead, 4,013 in government
controlled area and 800 in LTTE controlled area, the country's military sources
said Monday.
In Indonesia, at least 4,448 people were killed as the country took the full
force of the huge earthquake and tidal waves that swallowed entire coastal
villages.
At least 4,278 people were killed in southern India, the Press Trust of India
reported.
In southern Thailand at least 461 people were killed, including foreign
tourists at famous seaside resorts.
A total of 44 bodies of people, including many elderly and children, had been
found by rescuers in the coastal areas of Penang, Kedah and Perlis states of
Malaysia up to 9:00 a.m. local time, police said.
Maldives and Bangladesh also reported deaths of more than 30 people.
Tsunamis triggered by the massive earthquake in Indonesia smashed into
coastal areas of the Indian Ocean ring nations Sunday, destroying villages and
flooding cities.
The death toll is increasing as counting of bodies washed up on beaches is
continuing while thousands were reported missing. Tens of thousands fled the
coasts for higher ground, fearing aftershocks and further flood surges.
Search and rescue operations for victims of the tidal waves which hit Penang
and Kedah states Sunday will continue until the end of Monday, a Malaysian
police chief said.
Penang State Deputy Police Chief Mohd Ali Mohd Yusuf, when contacted by
Xinhua, said that police and emergency aid units were carrying out 24-hour
operations with about 200 members of search and rescue teams being deployed at
two locations namely Batu Feringghi and Balik Pulau, the popular beaches in
Penang island.
"A troop from the Federal Reserve Unit (FRU) with 120 ordinary policemen have
been stationed at Batu Feringghi while 10 officers and 80 lower rank policemen
are being assigned to Balik Pulau," he said.
He said hundreds of residents living in the coastal areas in the two
districts had also moved out of their homes temporarily.
At the scene of devastation, two fishing boats were swept from their moorings
off the beach to Tanjung Tokong Avenue, main coastal road in Penang. The sea
waters swept more than 150 meters inland and destroyed some houses and other
property.
Meanwhile, Deputy Chief Minister of the state Abdul Rashid Abdullah said the
state government had given out immediate aid to the victims of the tragedy.
Sri Lanka has dispatched some 25,000 soldiers and 10 helicopters Monday to
coastal areas to deliver aid and rescue teams.
The helicopters were dropping medicine and rescue teams to areas not
accessible by land, while soldiers were to help the local people in their rescue
work.
The powerful earthquake that shook off the cost of Indonesia's Aceh province
on Sunday was the worst natural disaster after the 1883 eruption of Mountain
Krakatau that killed 36,000 people in the country.
Local hospitals in Aceh, some 2,000 km west of Jakarta, reported that bodies
continue to arrive.
"The latest data in the morning (Monday) may change anytime," said government
spokesman Eddy Sofyan.