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  The initial objective of this 2004 tsunami disaster site was to provide information on aid and relief efforts to which we experienced great success through the help of volunteers and the media. We have since shifted the site's focus to cover the post-tsunami aspect of the disaster as many of these tsunami affected countries are great holiday destinations where revenue from tourism and shopping are just as vital to their full recovery.  
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Sunday, January 02, 2005
Donations - Penang Office for Human Development
In collaboration with the National Office for Human Development (NOHD), the Penang Office for Human Development (POHD) will help organize the collection of aid for Penang Diocese (Northern area) to be send to Sri Lanka. Items required are as follows:

* dry food
* water
* clothes
* medical supplies – specifically painkillers, cough, cold, and fever medication, surgical gloves as well as vitamins.

The collection centre is at:

Ground Floor
Pusat Keuskupan Katolik (Catholic Diocesan Centre)
290 Macalister Road, Penang
Tel. 2273405

The last date for accepting collection will be on 7th January.

NOTE: The Pusat K.K. is next door to the Jasmine Restaurant (and former Wisma Katolik), few blocks before reaching Island Hospital, and opposite YMCA (not directly). It is a big 4 storey grey building.

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  • This tsunami disaster is the worst and most devastating human catastrophe in living memory.
    Write to us if you wish to share a personal experience, locate a missing friend, or simply want to convey a message to the victims.
  • "Without my wife I don't want to live. But because of my child, I will." - Sri Lankan Pala Withanage.
  • "I have been just married for a week and been spending our honeymoon in Bentota, Sri Lanka. Sharon (my wife) went down to the beach this morning to sunbathe and I have not seen her since. All I saw was a big wall of water coming down on the place where her sun bed was. She was probably fast asleep. I'm absolutely devastated." - British resident Ben Chod
  • "If the body is in a condition to be moved, we put it into the mass burial pit and if it's too decomposed, we pour diesel over it and burn it with debris from thatched huts. Usually the pyres have 20 to 30 bodies at one go." - South Indian resident Subash

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