Gambar Korban Tsunami Dan gempa Di Nanggroe Acheh
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Gambar Korban Tsunami Dan gempa Di Nanggroe Acheh |
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An aerial view of the countryside south of Banda Aceh, Sumatra on January 1, 2005. HS-2, embarked aboard USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72) is transporting supplies, bringing in disaster relief teams and supporting humanitarian airlifts to Tsunami-stricken coastal regions. The Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group is currently operating in the Indian Ocean off the waters of Indonesia and Thailand. Picture taken January 1, 2005. (U.S. Navy (/Patrick M. Bonafede via Reuters - Handout)
MAYAT-mayat mangsa kejadian gempa bumi dan ombak besar tsunami masih bergelimpangan serta terapung-apung pada permukaan air yang bercampur-baur dengan sampah sarap di Banda Aceh, Indonesia semalam. - Gambar Reuters
US President George W. Bush (news - web sites) issues a statement regarding the devastating Asian tsunami, from his Prairie Chapel Ranch near Crawford, Texas, December 29, 2004. Bush said on Wednesday the United States' initial grant of $35 million in the aftermath of the tsunami disaster in South East Asia was 'only the beginning of our help' but he did not announce an immediate increase in aid. REUTERS/Mike Theiler
Boats washed ashore lie near local businesses in downtown Banda Aceh, Sumatra, January 1, 2005 following a massive Tsunami that struck the area on December, 26, 2004. A week after giant waves swamped parts of the provincial capital, Banda Aceh, on the northern tip of Sumatra island, the water is only just beginning to drain off to reveal the full extent of the horrific destruction and yet more bodies to count. Picture taken January 1, 2005. REUTERS/Department of Defense /Michael L. Bak-Handout EDITORIAL USE ONLY
Rescue workers remove a body of a victim of Sunday's tsunami from the compound of the Grand Mosque in Banda Aceh, Indonesia December 29, 2004. Indonesian Vice President Jusuf Kalla said on Wednesday the death toll from the weekend quake and tsunami had reached as high as 40,000 people. He said an estimated five percent of the 300,000 population of the Aceh's provincial capital, Banda Aceh, had died. REUTERS/Darren Whiteside
Indonesian women hold candles during a candlelight vigil in Jakarta December 29, 2004 for victims of tsunami-hit Aceh. One of the most powerful earthquakes in history hit Asia over the weekend, unleashing a series of tidal waves which devastated coastal areas of Sri Lanka, India, Indonesia and tourist isles in Thailand, killing tens of thousands of people. REUTERS/Dadang Tri
An Indonesian woman weeps as she holds a child in an area devastated by huge tsunami wave which hit the town of Banda Aceh following Sunday's massive earthquake December 30, 2004. REUTERS/Yusuf
IKONOS satellite images show Aceh on northern Sumatra in scene details, at 2-meter resolution, taken by the IKONOS satellite from 423 miles in space, over Indonesia. The image on the left was taken on January 10, 2004 while the image at right was taken December 29, 2004. The death toll in the Indian Ocean tsunami disaster soared above 125,000 on December 30, 2004 as millions scrambled for food and clean water and rumours of new waves sent many fleeing inland in panic. The Indonesian Health Ministry said just under 80,000 people had died in the northern Aceh province that was close to the undersea quake, some 28,000 more than previously announced. MANDATORY CREDIT EDITORIAL USE ONLY NO SALES REUTERS/Space Imaging/CRISP-Singapore
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