Despite its own disaster, India's navy quietly helps Sri Lanka clean up
When Indian naval Captain T. K. Ashokan was at sea during
exercises on December 26, he felt an unusual sudden swell.
Five days later, the INS Sarvekshak dropped anchor outside Sri
Lanka's debris-strewn Galle harbour with an urgent mission: to
clean it up, allowing relief to reach the survivors of the
country's worst-ever natural disaster.
"Before we even reached here, we saw a few sunken boats right
out in the middle of the sea," Ashokan said of the damage wrought
by the killer tsunami.
The wall of water triggered by an earthquake off the coast of
Sumatra also hit 10 other countries, including India, killing
more than 150,000 people.
The Sarvekshak, a ship that specialises in hydrography or the
mapping of the ocean floor, drew into Galle in the dead of night,
but lighthouses usually ablaze with light along the ravaged coast
were snuffed out.
"The normal activities you associate with a harbour were
conspicuous by their absence," he said, speaking onboard as
relief operations continued in battered Sri Lanka, with a total
of 11 Indian naval vessels lending a hand.
"It was like entering a desolate, dead place."
The immediate mission of the 218 officers and sailors onboard,
along with 82 army personnel, was to clear the harbour to allow
the ships carrying a flood of international aid arriving here to
safely dock, the captain said.
An emblem of the monumental effort this took over the
following three days sits right on the pier where Ashokan's ship
is now docked: a massive dredger that the tsunami wave heaved up
and gently placed down, undamaged.
"It's a miracle -- that weighs more than 1,000 tonnes and it
was in the water. The tsunami came and just lifted it out. If you
want to see the power of nature, there it is," said the captain,
a naval officer for 25 years.
"I've never seen anything like it in my life."
Using its cutting-edge surveying equipment, the three-year-old
Sarvekshak's first task was to map out where boats, buses and
other sizeable objects had been hurled into the harbour by the
powerful waves.
A team of 25 specialist divers then worked on clearing the
harbour of the debris, wrapping up work on January 3.
"There were so many sunken boats, we lost count of them," he
said.
While Galle harbour is an important commercial port for Sri
Lanka, a port worker who did not want to be identified said that
no commercial ships were damaged, with the fishing fleet instead
bearing the brunt of the catastrophe.
Scores of boats belonging to local fishermen, painted in
incongruously cheerful hues of blue and yellow, red and green,
still litter the side of the coastal road winding along the
harbour.
Another crucial job the crew carried out was replacing the
buoys that marked out a safe passage for ships into the harbour,
which were torn from their anchors by the force of the tsunami.
Ashokan said the scale of the devastation and clean-up did not
compare to other natural disasters he has seen, including a major
cyclone, both physically and emotionally.
"This was totally different. With a cyclone, there is a
gradual build up. People can get a little prepared, but this was
something that caught people completely by surprise," he said.
"It's more than the physical. The emotional quotient is also
there... It's not just the hard work. You see the strain on the
people, and this tires you out faster."
Ashokan hailed the Sri Lankans for their bravery and energy in
starting to swing back to normal life.
"The Sri Lankans have risen to the occasion most admirably.
Life is getting back to normal. People are not just sitting
around, and that's a welcome sign."
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