Sounds very bad. Many people on beaches or in diving caves or on small boats were swept out to sea, or suffered deep cuts while being swept into objects near the beaches. A sad black day in Phuket. R.I.P. locals and tourists who have died, and prayers to those suffering critical injuries. 168 confirmed dead in Phuket as of 27th Dec. I fear this figure will go much higher as people report missing family members and resorts report missing tourists.
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Tourists tell of hell in paradise
By Alan Morison
Phuket, Thailand
December 27, 2004
Paradise was ripped asunder yesterday, washed away by a series of freak waves that left the Thai holiday island of Phuket dealing with its biggest disaster in modern times.
At least 168 people and more than 1000 were injured officials, said.
The Government ordered the evacuation of the stricken areas, which included the main beaches of Phuket, popular with tourists and at the height of its holiday season. The tsunami tossed cars around like toys and swept into luxury hotels.
At Wachira Hospital, in Phuket City, doctors and nurses were struggling to cope with scores of injured people.
There, Canadian Don Howie was sitting and counting his blessings. He had bandaged arms and legs, and an amazing story to tell.
The 57-year-old had gone snorkelling at Kata Noi beach about 9am yesterday.
The first Mr Howie knew of the impending disaster was when a gigantic surge sucked the water from under him.
"The sea suddenly surged out for about, oh, 200 metres," he said. "There was nothing left but sand. Luckily, I was left standing on the rocks where I had been looking at the fish and coral.
"Anyone swimming in the middle of the beach must have been dragged well out to sea."
But before he and other snorkellers could react, the first of the series of huge waves pummelled them and swept them from the rocks. Mr Howie suffered cuts and abrasions to his arms and legs as he was swept against the rocks, but kept his head above water enough to survive a dramatic ride into the beach.
He was able to note that one of the waves seemed to him to sweep along the beach sideways.
His wife, Beverly, watching from their third-floor beachfront hotel room, could only look on in mounting horror.
The second wave was the largest, she said.
"I'd say it was about 15 feet (five metres). The water just smashed everything in its path. It came up over the beach, over the road running along the beach front, behind the main part of the hotel, and swept away large four-wheel-drive vehicles.
"Water surged into the hotel lobby of our wing, on the other side of the road, and smashed the windows of shops fronting the street."
Mr Howie and other survivors were quickly moved up a hill to a safe height, where doctors among the vacationers tended to their wounds.
Many people were carried off to hospitals and clinics on the back of pick-ups as rescuers moved through the sandy debris that choked local bars and restaurants.
Others were not as lucky. Several foreign divers were killed when they were hit by tsunamis while about 70 were exploring the famed Emerald Cave off southern Thailand, police said. Rescue workers were trying to extract the survivors.
Australian tourists watched in horror as walls of quake-generated water swept ashore on the resort island.
Australian Raeshell Tang and her husband Mark watched from their hotel room as the tsunami raged ashore at Phuket.
"We just went out on to the balcony to see what the day was going to be like and there it was in front of us - the tidal wave," she said.
Early reports said one tourist had been killed and five were missing after the huge wave struck.
She said many people had suffered cuts and bruises after being caught in the tsunami.
"There were lots of people with many deep cuts," she said. "Lots of blood everywhere." Another Australian tourist in Phuket, Fiona Rudkin, said some tourists were washed away.
"We've just heard that there's been people on the beach that have been washed away," she said.
The wall of water had also done great damage in the town, she said.
West Australian state MP John Hyde described the scene in southern Thailand as one of devastation.
"Just out of nowhere, suddenly the streets are awash and people just running and screaming from the beach," he told ABC television.
"All the windows are blown in. (There's) debris everywhere."
Perth tourist Simon Morse said he saw people being swept along the street.
"People were getting swept along still on their motorbikes on their sides," he told an ABC reporter.
"There were cars that had been picked up by the storm surge and they were getting pushed down the road, taking things out as they went."
Outside Wachira Hospital, one of three public hospitals on the island, officials were posting the names of people who had been admitted for treatment on large boards. A crowd of about 100 people, most of them locals, were waiting anxiously for news of relatives.
It will be days before authorities on the island can gauge the full impact of the disaster. The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade is trying to determine whether any Australians were killed or injured around the region in the earthquake's aftermath.
A department spokesman said inquiries were being made urgently about the welfare of Australians in the region but so far there had been no reports of casualties. "We still don't know at this seforum.xxxe," he said. The spokesman said relatives of Australians who were in the region could contact the department on its hotline, 1800 00 22 14 for assistance.
- with Reuters, AAP