[Staff report] Heart-rending scenes of tearful
disaster victims fleeing the heavily devastated province of Aceh into
the warm embraces of relatives have become daily sights at Indonesia's
Medan Airport.
Since the December 26, 2004 tsunami, many places in
Aceh have been cut off from the outside world and relief supplies have
yet to reach victims. For volunteers delivering the first batch of relief
materials into the area, horrifying scenes resembling those of doomsday
remain vivid in their minds.
Mr. Hardi Li, a 43-year-old Chinese native raised in
Medan and an insurance worker, is also a member of the Indonesia branch
of the spiritual group known as The Supreme Master Ching Hai International
Association. Mr. Li said that on December 27, a day after the tsunami,
the Association delivered around five tons of relief materials, including
food, clothing and medical supplies to Lhokseumawe, located between
Medan and Aceh. Mr. Li and several volunteer workers immediately rushed
to the scene to transport the supplies to the affected areas by truck.
'The severity of the disaster was beyond everyone's
imagination," said Mr. Li. Thirty minutes after the relief team
had set out on their journey to Aceh, they saw bodies and a few survivors
here and there. They immediately alighted, preparing to distribute relief
materials, but the victims declined their offer and instead urged them
on to Aceh, where the situation was believed to be very severe.
Shocked to See Someone Alive
The group arrived in Aceh at ten o'clock that night
and it was pitch dark everywhere. Wherever the headlights of their truck
shone, they saw bodies—lying on the roads, dangling on rooftops
and trees. A search failed to find any signs of survivors. They could
only move on. At about three in the morning, the moon shone brightly,
its light falling on piles and piles of dead bodies.
After driving on for another half hour, they met five
or six survivors. The relief workers" unexpected appearance as
they approached the victims to offer their assistance took the local
people by surprise. The survivors then took the workers to a small,
tattered house, where they found dozens more victims, many of them injured.
The relief team quickly sought military assistance, requesting gas and
rushing the injured to the airport in military trucks. For Mr. Li Jian,
the terrible scenes that he witnessed during his relief trip to Aceh
will be forever imprinted in his mind.