Fan Forum
Remember Me?
Register

  New Forum Poll (Vote Here)   |     Summer TV Shows Poll (Vote Here)   |     Request a Forum   |     View New Forums

Reply   Post New Thread
 
Thread Tools
Old 02-02-2005, 03:25 PM
  #1
Passionate Fan

 
mh67511's Avatar
 
Joined: Dec 2001
Posts: 3,663
38 days later, more Tsunami survivors found

Too much negative news lately so here's a nice story!

Quote:
38 days later, more Tsunami survivors found

NEW DELHI - Nine tribespeople who survived the December tsunami spent 38 days wandering through flattened villages on a remote Indian island, eating boars and coconuts, before police found them Wednesday.

Five men, two women and two young girls were discovered in a forest on Campbell Bay island by police searching for people still missing after the Dec. 26 disaster that killed at least 158,000 in 11 nations. At least 10,749 people were killed in India.

The nine belong to the Nicobarese tribe, Inspector Shaukat Hussain told The Associated Press by telephone from Campbell Bay, the only town in Great Nicobar, India’s southernmost island. They range in age from 11 to 65.

The island, located in the Andaman and Nicobar archipelago, is also known as Campbell Bay after its only town. The tsunami wiped out many villages on the island 140 miles from Banda Aceh, the worst-hit area in Indonesia.

“We were in a combing operation,” Hussain said. “They were sitting in the forest when we saw them, and they just ran to us, without saying anything. They seemed happy, yes, but there was no hugging and tears and shouting in joy and all that.”

Two of the survivors were hospitalized for severe dehydration, while the others were brought to a relief camp.

“They seemed weak but OK. They said they had eaten coconuts, boars and wild shoots. They hunted to stay alive,” Hussain said.

“We found them not too far from where we found a dead body and cremated it.”

The tribespeople were all residents of the island’s Pillowbhabhi village on the western coast.

The Nicobarese, the largest of the indigenous tribes living in the archipelago, are a hardy tribe used to foraging and hunting in the forests to survive. However, they suffered extensive damage in the tsunamis because they lived in huts along the coast.

Hussain led a police team to look for bodies from the southern tip of the island, which was called Indira Point — India’s southernmost tip — but disappeared after the tsunami.

The team landed at the southernmost tip of the island and trekked into the forest. After about eight miles, they spotted the survivors, he said.

“When the tsunami came, they had climbed on to a hill. They kept walking, they got lost, and were wandering in the forest, resting, then walking again,” Hussain said. “They traveled from the western side of the island to the eastern side, until we saved them.”
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6901750/
mh67511 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-02-2005, 03:41 PM
  #2
Master Fan

 
sick little jag's Avatar
 
Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 20,783
that's amazing. i had been saying for a while that i thought i was sad how there probably were people who were on the islands and all over who had survived, but because there were so many dead people would stop looking for them and they'd end up dying as well...so it's nice to hear that they haven't given up and that, wow, people are actually managing to survive so long.
__________________
If looks could really kill, then my profession would be staring / know we do this cause we care
and not for the thrill ....
Samantha #121
sick little jag is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply   Post New Thread

Bookmarks


Thread Tools



All times are GMT -7. The time now is 03:26 PM.

Fan Forum  |  Contact Us  |  Fan Forum on Twitter  |  Fan Forum on Facebook  |  Archive  |  Top

Powered by vBulletin, Copyright © 2000-2012, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.5.2
Copyright © 1998-2012, Fan Forum.