By Ananda-USA
March 13, 2011
Japan has suffered a great natural diaster ... a 9.0 Richter scale earthquake that spawned a train of giant tsunami waves exceeding 10m in height. Well prepared for earthquakes though seismicity resitant design of buildings and public preparedness, Japan weathered the earthquake well with modest damage and loss of life, but suffered grievously from the tsunami that soon followed in the wake of the earthquake.
The tsunami devastated villages, towns and cities along the coast of North-Eastern Japan centered around the city of Sendai .. home to over a million people. It destroyed sea ports, air ports, homes and commercial buildings, machinery, vehicles, trains, businesses, farms, ships and fishing boats in an awesome display of nature's hidden strength. The surging water swept across bays, harbors, and fields, created vortices in which ships whirled helplessly, channeled along canals, spilled over seawalls, surmounted earthen embankments, mocking man's pitiful attempts to control nature in its fury.
As everyone watched with bated breath, and hoped that Japan's efforts at tsunami preparedness would help minimize casualties, it was not to be. The casualties first reported in the tens, jumped to hundreds, to thousands .. and now seem poised to run into the tens of thousands. Three nuclear reactors at oceanside nuclear power plants lost their ability to cool the reactor cores. They suffered partial core meltdowns, and two reactor buildings exploded due to hydrogen gas buildup. This compounded the already massive difficulties created by the tsunami with a threat of radioactive fallout, and deprived Japan's electrical grid of the power from as many as five nuclear reactors that were needed to produce electricity to power disaster rescue and rehabilitation.
Sri Lankans, who until recently had no familiarity at all with tsunamis, except in the dim memory of a legendary ocean flood in the days of Vihara Maya Devi, Kelani Tissa and Kavan Tissa over two millenia ago, acquired our own first hand experience in 2004 of the price that tsunamis generated by seismic events far away, across thousands of miles ocean, can exact in lost and destroyed lives and livelihoods, and levelled villages, towns, and cities. We, as a people, know this pain well.
When Sri Lanka cried in agony at the death and destruction that the Sumatran earthquake and tsunami spawned, the Japanese people rallied to Sri Lanka's aid with food, medicine, rescue teams, helicopters, electric generators, and everything else we urgently needed. They opened their hearts and their coffers to us as few others did. It is a rare Sri Lankan family that was untouched by that disaster of Armageddon proportions.
Today, the great and good people of Japan, our allies in times both good and bad, have suffered the same fate and need help. Let us rush to their help and give generously in every possible way.
President Mahinda Rajapaksa has already dispatched Sri Lankan rescue teams to Japan (see below) and has offered whatever aid we can summon as a Nation.
That, however, is not sufficient. Let each and every one of us Sri Lankans contribute to the fullest extent to help the Japanese people in their hour of need, as if they were our own citizens of Sri Lanka. Let us do so, NOW!
Sri Lanka offers aid to devastated Japan, dispatches rescue teams
ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.
March 13, 2011
Colombo: Sri Lanka government announced Sunday that it will donate one million US dollars to tsunami hit Japan and send a tri-forces rescue team to assist the devastated country in its recovery efforts.
Sri Lanka President Mahinda Rajapaksa today instructed the Treasury Secretary Dr. P.B. Jayasundara to take steps to release the money at the earliest through the Sri Lankan mission in Japan, the government media unit said.
A group of specially trained tri- forces rescue team will also be dispatched immediately along with a special medical team of doctors and nurses to Japan to provide medical assistance to the tsunami affected people.
Sri Lanka, having dealt with its own devastation in 2004 by the Boxing Day Indian Ocean tsunami that killed 35,000 people in the island, has the necessary experience in such rescue and relief measures.
The President has directed the Sri Lankan Envoy in Japan to coordinate all possible assistance as a friendly country to Japan.
According to Japanese officials, more than 1,400 people were killed by the Friday's magnitude 8.9 ocean earthquake that hit the eastern coast of Japan and the tsunami that followed.
The 23-foot tsunami triggered by the earthquake in the sea 80 miles off Sendai killed hundreds of people and swept away ships, planes, homes, boats and cars.
The officials however, estimate the death toll to rise over 10,000 as rescue efforts are continuing.
Japan is the single largest donor to Sri Lanka providing about two-thirds of the total donor contribution.
Monday, March 14, 2011
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