First Published: January 2005
       This is an OutUK Archive Item and so some of the links and information may be out of date.
With the death toll continuing to rise, OutUK correspondent Rex Wockner has been talking to members of gay organisations in countries which have suffered such devastation and death. He has yet to make contact with representatives from India.
SRI LANKA

The Boxing Day tsunami killed 36 members of the Sri Lankan gay organization Companions on a Journey. More remain unaccounted for. Over a hundred of the group's members had their homes destroyed by the waves.

"These are numbers that we have received so far," said Sherman de Rose, the group's executive director. "The coastal line which the tourists frequent is destroyed entirely. So, along with it, whatever the gay-friendly places were, were destroyed as well. Mind you, we didn't have any out and open gay/lesbian spaces, although it was accepted in tourist areas where a lot of LGB tourists from Western Europe and Scandinavian countries visit for holidays.

"Fortunately for the gay community," de Rose said, "the tsunami didn't make its appearance in the evening; otherwise lots of gays cruising along the beaches would have perished."

Companions has received many requests for assistance and offers of help.

"It's amazing how the gays and lesbians responded to the calamity," de Rose said. "Many volunteered with relief work and donated to relief programs. We have received many calls from gay/lesbian people who wanted to support the affected in any possible way.

"We have also received lots of requests from affected members to assist them with building their destroyed shelters. We have donated clothing, dry rations, cooked food, water and medicine. Our principal donor, Hivos-Netherlands, has informed us that we could utilize some of the funds they have provided for HIV/AIDS- and sexuality-related activities for relief purposes."
The executive director of the Sri Lankan organisation Equal Ground, Rosanna Flamer-Caldera, said: "The magnitude of the catastrophe that affected Sri Lanka on Boxing Day is something that is hardlydescribable. Members of Equal Ground have not only given of their timeand energy to volunteer for relief efforts, but also have spent their own money buying essentials like medicine and food, and donating it to the larger organizations sending the trucks to the north, east and south."

Flamer-Calders said "many of the gay 'spaces' in the south and also in Negombo to the north of Colombo were damaged or wiped out by the tsunami. ... This horrible, horrible disaster has knocked Sri Lanka so bad that it will take years and years to rebuild."

INDONESIA

In Indonesia, gay groups have been unable to get any information from the most-affected areas.

"We don't know about the effect of the tsunami on gay people in Aceh and North Sumatra," said Dédé Oetomo, head of GAYa NUSANTARA. "We never had any organized contact in Aceh or the island of Nias in North Sumatra, which have been hardest-hit.

"Medan, the major city on the eastern coast with a sizeable gay population, was spared due to its distance from the epicenter," Oetomo said. "The good news is that gay organizations are involved in fundraising and collecting donations together with other community groups."

THAILAND

In Thailand, the gay resort of Phuket was hard-hit. It has many gay guest houses, restaurants, bars, shops and coffeehouses. But, according to Ulf Mikaelsson and Börje Carlsson, two Swedes who run the Connect Guest House and Coffee Bar, most of the gay businesses are "far enough from the beach to be untouched by the tragedy."

"The day of the tsunami disaster, the Connect, with its satellite television connection, was one of the only sources of news coverage of the tragedy as it unfolded," the couple wrote in an e-mail. "Scores of native and foreign gays gathered around the mounted television and ate, drank and bonded with each other as news came in as to the losses being sustained.

"Right now, the Phuket gay community is busy raising funds for those Thais and foreigners who suffered injury and loss due to the tidal wave," the couple said. "It will take some months to clean up and rebuild the beach area, but everything else on the island, 500 yards or more from the beach, is exactly as it was -- untouched by the tsunami. ... If you want to help us in Patong, do not cancel your tour to Patong Beach. Now more than ever we need your support."

Carlsson described his own experience of the tsunami.

"It was a clear blue sky and we were having our morning coffee at Connect when we heard people screaming that the beach had disappeared," he said. "When I got close to the beach I heard more screaming and suddenly I saw this huge wave, taller than the palm trees, coming to crash down on us. ... We rushed into a hotel as the huge wave rolled into Patong Beach. The giant wave flooded the lobby within seconds and dragged furniture onto the street. I had to wrap myself around a pillar to avoid being swept away. As I was standing there, a car actually floated into the lobby and overturned because the current was so strong. The water was up to my chest and I was holding on to my boyfriend's hand because he can't swim."

"It's a strange feeling to walk from one side of Rath-U-Thit road to the other," Carlsson said. "On one side it looks like a war zone and on the other side nothing had changed."

©2005 WINS Photography ©2004 UNICEF

UK Disasters Emergency Committee Appeal

Companions on a Journey

Equal Ground

Patong Beach

 

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