CUDDALORE, India – The buzz of grim conversation in the darkened morgue was broken by a man’s shriek as the small body was lowered on a bed. “My son, my king!” wailed Venkatesh, hugging the limp shrouded bundle.
Thousands of miles away in Indonesia, farmer Yusya Yusman searched the beaches for his two children lost in Sunday’s tsunami. “My life is over,” he said emotionlessly.
In country after country, children have emerged as the biggest victims of Sunday’s quake-born tsunami waves. Thousands and thousands drowned, battered and washed away by huge walls of water – and thousands more have been orphaned.
“Our major concern is that the kids who survived the tsunami now survive the aftermath,” said UNICEF spokesman Alfred Ironside in New York. “Because children are the most vulnerable to disease and lack of proper nutrition and water.”
UNICEF estimates at least one-third of the tens of thousands who died were children, and the proportion could be up to half, Ironside said.
Children make up at least half of the population in Asia. Many of them work alongside poverty-stricken parents in the fishing or related industries in coastal areas, so they were in harm’s way when the waves came. Many children from more affluent families would also have been on the beaches for a stroll or for Sunday picnics.
In Sri Lanka, which suffered the biggest loss of life in the tsunami, crowds had come to the beaches to watch the sea after word spread that it was producing larger-than-normal waves.
Thousands of children joined their elders to see the spectacle. The waves brought in fish. The old and the young collected them. Many waited for more fun.
Then the 15- to 20-foot tall waves hit the tropical island of 19 million people.
“They got caught and could not run to safety. This is the reason why we have so many child victims,” said Rienzie Perera, a police spokesman who said reports from affected police stations indicated children made up about half the victims in Sri Lanka.
On Monday, parents wept over the bodies of their children in streets and hospitals across the island, even as some dead children still dangled unclaimed from barbed wire fences.
The scenes of unimagined grief and mourning were repeated across Asia.
“Where are my children?” wept 41-year-old Absah, as she searched for her 11 missing children in Banda Aceh, the Indonesian city closest to Sunday’s epicenter. “Where are they? Why did this happen to me? I’ve lost everything.”
On the day disaster struck, Malaysian Rosita Wan recalled watching in horror as her 5-year-old son was gulped by the sea while he swam near the shore at Penang.
“I could only watch helplessly while I heard my son screaming for help. Then he was underwater, and I never saw him again,” said a sobbing Rosita, 30.
About half of the nearly 400 people who perished in Cuddalore in India’s Tamil Nadu state were children, leaving the town stunned.
Under Hindu tradition, children are buried instead of being cremated as adults are. For the grim task in Cuddalore, two pits, together about half the size of a basketball court, were dug near a river at the edge of this coconut palm-fringed town.
After one couple laid the body of their daughter in the deep pit, a bulldozer shoveled in sand and the little girl disappeared from view. They then stepped aside for others to bury their children, denied any chance for a service or private mourning.
Most of the children, ages 5-12, were buried as they were found – in their Sunday clothes – without the customary shroud.
Local officials wanted to quickly finish the burial, and the cremation of adult victims, so they could turn their attention to helping those left alive.
Bodies of young and old lay unclaimed at the town morgue, awaiting identification by relatives. Doctors called relatives in one by one over a public address system, while vans with wailing sirens brought in newly discovered bodies.
Venkatesh, who uses only one name, found his 11-year-old son, Suman, as his body was lowered on to a gurney.
Within moments, an identification tag was tied to the boy’s hand and his body taken inside.
As one of his relatives pulled him away, Venkatesh kept asking: “How can I go, leaving behind my son?”
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