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Images reveal devastation in tsunami-hit Tonga
By Chris FOLEY
Wellington (AFP) Jan 18, 2022

Tongan Olympic flagbearer Taufatofua prays for news of father
Sydney (AFP) Jan 18, 2022 - Tongan Olympic flagbearer Pita Taufatofua -- who made global headlines for going bare-chested at the Games -- is praying for news of his father after failing to hear from him following a devastating tsunami.

The Pacific island nation suffered widespread damage after a huge underwater volcanic eruption and tsunami on the weekend.

Speaking to AFP from Brisbane, Australia, the athlete said his father had travelled to Tonga's main island, Tongatapu, a few days before the Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha'Apai volcano erupted.

"He had just been made governor of Ha'Apai so he had to return to Tongatapu for the opening of parliament," said Taufatofua, who first captured world attention when the Rio Games opened in 2016, where he appeared topless and glistening with body oil while waving the Tongan flag.

The Olympian said a huge ash cloud from the volcano prevented his father's return to Ha'Apai and that he was securing the family's waterfront home on Tongatapu when the tsunami hit.

"I'm hoping and praying that my father is doing well," said Taufatofua, who competed in taekwondo in Rio and also represented his nation at the 2018 Winter Games, and Tokyo 2020.

Communication from Tonga has been crippled since the island nation's undersea cable was damaged during the disaster.

The first details of the impact on the ground have come from surveillance flights that were conducted by the Australian and New Zealand governments on Monday.

"They've shown pictures of the green before and then the pictures now are black of these green islands," Taufatofua said.

"This is going to have a huge impact on people with regards to whether it be respiratory health, whether it be water supply."

The athlete has launched a GoFundMe campaign which has raised nearly AU$345,000 (US$250,000).

"Our goal is to raise $1 million," he said.

Once communications reopen, a volunteer team on the ground will conduct a needs assessment to determine where the funds are most urgently required.

At the moment, Taufatofua's focus is repairing any damage to vital infrastructure, including Tonga's two main hospitals and schools.

"If the footage that we saw is anything to go by then we're thinking damage will be in the tens to hundreds of millions of dollars in terms of infrastructure," he said.

Separate to his GoFundMe campaign, Taufatofua is also a Pacific ambassador for UNICEF and spent Tuesday packing aid supplies for Tonga.

The UNICEF supplies, including sanitation, wash and water kits, were scheduled to travel to Tonga on the HMAS Adelaide, which is expected to depart Brisbane on Wednesday morning.

It has been an anxious wait for many Tongans living in Australia, New Zealand and elsewhere since the tsunami struck.

"There are probably equal amounts of Tongans overseas as in Tonga. Maybe even a bit more. So there are a lot of people who are going through a stressful time at the moment," Taufatofua said.

The athlete said his thoughts were with those on the island.

"I just want them to know that while everything was tough for them - while the ashes were falling - we were here working hard, getting the awareness out, standing with them.

"They were not standing alone."

A volcano that exploded in the Pacific island nation of Tonga has almost disappeared from view, new images revealed Tuesday, with swathes of the country smothered in grey dust or damaged by a tsunami.

The volcano erupted 30 kilometres (19 miles) into the air on Saturday and deposited ash, gas and acid rain across a large area of the Pacific.

In the tsunami that followed, waves in Tonga rose up to 15 metres (50 feet), its government said in a statement.

Three people were killed and "a number" were injured, the government said on Twitter, calling the volcano explosion "an unprecedented disaster."

Three days after the eruption, the outside world is still struggling to understand the scale of the damage using patchy satellite phone connections, surveillance flights and satellite images.

While power and local phone systems have been partially restored, international communications remain severed and the internet is down.

Satellite images released by Maxar Technologies on Tuesday showed that where most of the volcanic structure stood above sea level a few days ago, there is now just open sea.

Only two relatively small volcanic islands were still visible above sea level after the eruption.

New Zealand released aerial images taken from a surveillance flight the previous day, revealing a tree-lined coast transformed from green to grey by the volcanic fallout.

Wrecked buildings were visible on the foreshore alongside others that appeared intact.

Volcanic ash blanketed island fields, images from an Australian Defence Force P-8A Poseidon patrol aircraft showed.

Shipping containers had been knocked over like dominoes at a port on the main island.

The World Health Organization said in a statement Tuesday that its liaison officer in Tonga, Dr Yutaro Setoya, was "channelling communication between UN agencies and the Tongan government".

"With international phone lines and internet connectivity still down, Dr Setoya's satellite phone is one of the few ways to get information," it said.

The officer has "literally been standing outside from dawn until long into the night for the past few days to ensure that the phone can reach the satellite signal", said the WHO's Health Cluster Coordinator for the Pacific, Sean Casey.

The UN health agency said around 100 houses had been damaged, with 50 destroyed on Tonga's main island of Tongatapu.

Between five and 10 centimetres of ash and dust had fallen on Tongatapu, the UN said.

Water supplies "have been seriously affected by the volcanic ash," the government said in a statement.

The WHO said the ash and dust were "raising concerns of air pollution and potential contamination of food & water supplies".

"The gov't has advised the public to remain indoors, use masks if going out & to drink bottled water due to the ashfall," according to WHO.

- Distress beacon -

Australia's HMAS Adelaide and New Zealand's HMNZS Wellington and HMNZS Aotearoa were ordered to be ready for a possible aid request from Tonga, which lies three to five days' sailing away.

The Red Cross said it was sending 2,516 water containers.

New Zealand has allocated NZ$1 million ($680,000) in humanitarian assistance and the United States has pledged $100,000.

France, which has territories in the South Pacific, pledged to help the people of Tonga's "most urgent needs".

The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said a signal had been detected from a distress beacon on a low-lying island, Mango.

The agency said surveillance flights had confirmed "substantial property damage" on Mango, home to about 30 people, and another island, Fonoi.

Images released by the United Nations Satellite Centre showed the impact of the disaster on the island of Nomuka, one of the closest to the Hunga-Tonga-Hunga-Ha'apai volcano.

The satellite centre said that of 104 structures analysed in a cloud-free area, 41 structures were damaged.

The government has begun evacuating the affected areas, according to its statement.

Tonga's airport was working to remove volcanic ash from the capital's runway. Australia said the ash must be cleared before it can land a C-130 military plane with aid.

One of the three people confirmed dead was Briton Angela Glover, a 50-year-old who ran a stray animals charity and was reported missing by her husband after the tsunami hit.

"Earlier today my family was sadly informed that the body of my sister Angela has been found," her brother Nick Eleini said after being given the news by the husband, James Glover.

"James was able to cling on to a tree for quite a long time, but Angela was unable to do so and was washed away with the dogs," he told The Guardian newspaper.

A 65-year-old woman from Mango and 49-year-old man from Nomuka island were also killed.

- Communications cut -

Even when relief efforts get under way, they may be complicated by Covid-19 entry restrictions.

The eruption -- one of the largest in decades -- was recorded around the world and heard as far away as Alaska, triggering a tsunami that flooded Pacific coastlines from Japan to the United States.

In Peru, authorities sealed off three beaches Monday after they were hit by an oil spill blamed on freak waves caused by the eruption.

The blast severed an undersea communications cable between Tonga and Fiji that operators said would take up to two weeks to repair.

bur-cf/djw/dva/axn/md

SOUTHERN CROSS HEALTHCARE GROUP


Related Links
Bringing Order To A World Of Disasters
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SHAKE AND BLOW
Shock waves, landslides may have caused 'rare' volcano tsunami: experts
Paris (AFP) Jan 17, 2022
A rare volcano-triggered tsunami sparked by the eruption of Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha'apai in Tonga could have been caused by shock waves or shifting underwater land, experts said Monday. "A volcanic-source tsunami event is rare but not unprecedented," a post on the website for New Zealand's geological hazard monitoring system GNS said Monday. GNS Tsunami Duty Officer Jonathan Hanson said it probably occurred in part thanks to a previous eruption of the same volcano one day earlier. "It is likely ... read more

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