whynot: etc: oh deer (Default)
Las ([personal profile] whynot) wrote2010-10-27 11:19 pm

"INDONESIA HAS BEEN FLATTENED" JOKES TO THE LEFT DD:

You've probably heard about this already. But. I guess you can stand to hear about it again.

HEY. HEY SOUTHEAST ASIA. CAN YOU LIKE. CALM YOUR SHIT DOWN. RING OF FIRE, CAN YOU TAKE A CHILL PILL, THAT'D BE GREAT. JFC.

1) VOLCANO, specifically Java's Mt. Merapi has claimed at least 33 lives, 17 injured, but WAIT! THERE'S MORE!
2) EARTHQUAKE roundabouts the Mentawai Islands, which caused a
2A) TSUNAMI. At least 311 people dead, 400 still missing. 20 villages leveled and approx 20,000 people displaced, because nature loves to kick Sumatra in the teeth.

This all happened in under 24 hours. I BELIEVE THE CORRECT PHRASE IS "WHAT THE EVERLOVING FUCK." I called my parents asking if our peeps in Yogyakarta (by Merapi) are okay - they're okay! - so yaaay. Also I guess Jakarta flooded the other day? As did West Papua. EVERY TIME I TURN AROUND, INDONESIA, YOU ALWAYS BE BLOWIN UP IN MY FACE.

PHILIPPINES, YOU ARE NOT OFF THE HOOK EITHER. I SEE YOU WITH YOUR SUPERTYPHOON OF 110 MPH WINDS. There were much fewer casualties with the supertyphoon because for the most part, people were on top of their shit with the warning systems, early detection, and evacuations. Food security's gonna go down the shitter a bit because the northern Philippines is the country's rice basket (the stairway to heaven in Banaue, natch), and that's the general area where Juan/Megi stormed through. The Merapi evacuations, eh, could've been better.

BUT LOOK AT YOUR LIFE, INDONESIA'S TSUNAMI WARNING SYSTEM! LOOK AT YOUR CHOICES!:
Indonesia's [tsunami early warning system], completed in 2008 with German aid, has since fallen into such disrepair that it effectively stopped working about a month ago, according to the head of the Meteorology and Geophysic Agency.

The system, which uses buoys to electronically detect sudden changes in water level, worked when it was completed, but by 2009 routine tests of it were showing problems, said the agency chief, who uses the single name Fauzi. By last month, he said, the entire system was broken because of inexperienced operators.

"We do not have the expertise to monitor the buoys to function as intended," he said.

As a result, he said, not a single siren sounded after Monday's quake. [source]
SO THAT HAPPENED. OR DIDN'T.

Surfaid International will take your donations to tsunami relief in Australian dollars. You can also call 1-800-257-957.

Do you guys know of other ways to help out? Other sites to donate to? Surfaid International is the only website I've found that has a specific focus on the Indonesian double whammy. Other websites just have like general donations to the organization. Like, there are some of those here, I guess...

ETA: [personal profile] mercredigirl posts links to some relief efforts we can donate to.

[originally posted at http://whynot.dreamwidth.org/39340.html | comment count unavailable comments]

[identity profile] twoskeletons.livejournal.com 2010-10-29 04:53 am (UTC)(link)
Yeah, my people are okay. Glad yours are too!
What do you think of a help_indonesia? My concern is that there doesn't seem to be a lot of relief efforts we can contribute to, though. There's no aid momentum...

[identity profile] gabby-silang.livejournal.com 2010-10-30 02:29 am (UTC)(link)
Is there not? Auuuugh. I know the Red Cross still has a decent presence in the area, ever since the tsunami back in 2004, but I'm not seeing anything new on their site about this month's crisis. The Mercy Corps (http://www.mercycorps.org/erynncarter/blog/22488) has some movement, but again, donations would be general to the org rather than this specific situation. AUGH ANNOYING. Back during the giant flooding in Manila, local orgs put together some good sites to donate through, a lot by phone and social media. I'll hunt around and see what we can find, and ask my dad, who might have some connections.

SO FRUSTRATING. :(((

[identity profile] twoskeletons.livejournal.com 2010-11-07 08:19 am (UTC)(link)
Local is totally the best way to go. The problem here is the same problem with the aid back when the tsunami happened: it is piling up at drop-off points. The disaster has so destroyed infrastructure, roads and stuff, that all this perfect good aid is kind of just sitting there.

...Not that this should be a reason for us to not help, right? :-/ Maybe instead of organizing a help_indonesia because omg time, I should just idk auction myself off? :-/////// Would that be too self-centered of me?

IDKKKKKKKKKK