January 02, 2005
Tsunami disaster
Focus: Nature's timebombReporting team: Matthew Campbell and Keith Loveard, Indonesia, Michael Sheridan and James Pringle, Thailand, Jon Swain and Amrit Dhillon, Sri Lanka, Jonathan Leake, David Cracknell and John Elliot, London. Edited by Richard WoodsIt is the biggest natural disaster for decades. Yet scientists feared such a catastrophe was looming. So why were there no warnings? A special report into the Asian tsunami that claimed more than 120,000 lives
The birds were the first to react. With a great beating of wings, thousands of egrets and cormorants rose from the placid coastal water off Sri Lanka and hurried inland, although nothing seemed amiss.
The air was soft and the sun was warm. The sea was unusually calm. Having breakfast last Sunday in the Yala Safari Game Lodge overlooking a lagoon was Uditha Hettige.
“All of a sudden the birds started flying off in a big commotion. There were too many to have been disturbed by a crocodile, so I looked up,” he said.
Tourists, many of them British, were celebrating Christmas on the island, thronging Yala and other coastal resorts. Lovers were lying on the beaches, swimmers were splashing in the cobalt blue waters, divers were exploring the coral reefs and fishermen were repairing their nets.
“I looked up towards the sea 150 metres away,” said Hettige, “and saw water coming at great speed.”
Much much more:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2089-1422835,00.htmlTYY