Tsunami victims remembered across the Tamil Nadu
Relatives of the dead pour milk on beaches as part of offerings to departed soul who perished 9 years ago.
Chennai: Survivors of the tsunami of 2004 offered prayers with flowers, milk and tears at several beachside spots struck by the Boxers Day disaster that consumed over 7,000 lives in Tamil Nadu.
Memorial services were held at several places in Chennai, Nagapattinam, Cuddalore, Puducherry, Tirunelveli and Kanyakumari, among other places, where the morning-walkers, fishers and tourists on the beaches perished in hundreds under the giant waves caused by the undersea earthquake in Indonesia. Properties worth crores of rupees were destroyed.
Relatives of the dead poured milk into the sea at several beaches as offerings to the departed souls on this ninth anniversary of the disaster that recorded the worst death toll in tsunamis in history. Fishermen’s associations and priests from nearby churches also participated in the solemn ceremonies, along with local officials.
While some complaints persist regarding non-fulfillment of rehab targets, the government has by and large done great job in mitigating the survivors’ misery and also ensuring that the seaside communities are warned when natural disasters, including cyclones and tsunamis, strike in the future.
“Tamil Nadu handled the tsunami disaster very well. The government at that time (Ms Jayalalithaa was the chief minister) took quick decisions, arranged for food and medical help immediately, released funds for acquisition of land from private parties for building houses for the displaced families and tied up with NGOs for putting up houses in the first phase before taking up more housing projects,” recalled revenue secretary Gagandeep Singh Bedi. As collector of Cuddalore, one of the badly hit districts in that tsunami, Bedi had worked 24x7 at that time to help the victims.
In fact, construction of pucca houses for the tsunami-hit fishermen minimised damage to their dwellings when Thane cyclone hit the coast last year. Also, the '1,418 crore ‘coastal disaster risk reduction project’ recently announced by the CM is expected to further strength coastal infrastructure, including communication systems to warn seaside communities in time, creating rural housing, evacuation shelters and putting up underground EB cables in vulnerable places, Bedi pointed out.