New
entitlement, Hardship allowance for Sumatra assist
Crowned
Kings of the sky, Workhorses ride high
Ray
of sunshine
 |
|
GRIM
TASK: Personnel from HMAS Kanimbla clear out drains in the
tsunami ravaged areas of Banda Aceh during a volunteer work
day.
|
|
Photo:
ABPH Jarrad Oliffe
|
By
CPL Cameron Jamieson
The eyes tell you what the mind refuses to comprehend. When asked
to say what they have seen, the ADF personnel who have come face-to-face
with the carnage in Banda Aceh will speak of the wreckage and
mud that covered the city. What they don’t talk about is the human
wreckage that was everywhere.
Invariably the Australians will tell you that they saw “stuff”,
a common term for the bodies and body parts that they have seen
or found. But the look in their eyes tells you of the horror they
have witnessed.
For those who have worked to clear the drains around Banda Aceh,
there have been other horrors to deal with.
All who have participated in these clearing operations understood
the importance of their work, as it was likely that an infectious
disease outbreak would occur if the foul water that pooled around
Banda Aceh was left to further stagnate.
But much of the drain clearing had to be done by hand or with
hand tools, and with each handful or shovelful of debris moved
came the chance of finding more “stuff”.
The images of Banda Aceh portrayed on the television are an accurate
picture of what happened to the city, but what they can’t convey
is the stench of mud and death that attack the senses until you
become desensitised.
But your senses soon return when you leave the city and return
to normality, because when you see those television images again
the horror of what you have seen returns ten-times over.
You can relate to where the images were taken – the avalanche
of building material rushing along with the seawater through the
streets of the shopping district, the father with his drowned
child in his arms walking near the river, and the row of dead
children at the hospital looking as if they are asleep. All Australians
can be justly proud of what the ADF has done to save lives and
relieve the suffering of the Indon
esian people in Aceh.
But the whole truth of what was seen may remain locked forever
within the eyes of the witnesses.
Where
to find help