Pope calls for international aid in Asia

Published: 31 December 2004 y., Friday
Pope John Paul II appealed for swift international aid to help thousands of victims from Sunday's massive tidal waves that swamped coastal areas across southern Asia - triggered by the world's most powerful earthquake in 40 years. During his customary Sunday noon appearance from his window overlooking St. Peter's Square, John Paul prayed for victims of the 8.-magnitude quake near the Indonesian island of Sumatra and the resulting tidal waves. ``The Christmas holiday has been saddened by the news that comes from Southeast Asia about the powerful earthquake which struck Indonesia, with consequences in other countries, including Sri Lanka, India, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Thailand, Malaysia and the Maldives.'' ``We hope that the international community acts to bring relief to the stricken populations,'' the pontiff said. In Brussels, European Union Humanitarian Aid Commissioner Luis Michel said it was important to deliver aid ``in those vital hours and days immediately after the disaster.'' The 25-nation EU will deliver $4 million in emergency aid as a start. ``For all the huge advances in the control of our lives through science and technology, an earthquake on this scale is truly humbling as well as profoundly tragic,'' said British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw. British consular officials were called from vacation and aid efforts were being organized. ``We are doing everything we can to assist, but the disruption to communication in the worst affected areas is inevitably making it difficult,'' Straw said. In Paris, French President Jacques Chirac sent a letter expressing his sympathy and the solidarity of France to the president of Sri Lanka, where some hundreds were killed and a million others displaced by waves that slammed coastlines. In Austria, relief officials and charities such as Caritas and Volkshilfe issued a broad and urgent appeal for cash donations.
Šaltinis: news.bostonherald.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Foreign divorces - MEPs to debate fairer rules

Divorcing someone of another nationality can be legal and emotional nightmare. more »

The first international evaluation of Lithuania’s reputation

People from various countries hold quite a favourable opinion about Lithuania’s governance, its activities in the international community, and economic living and working conditions in Lithuania. more »

Movie goers support African village

An African eco-village in South Africa's wine region receives funding from a surprising source. more »

MEP on ways to avert future credit crunch

Teaching children about basic finance so they avoid getting into bad debts at a later age is the aim of a leading MEP. more »

MEPs to vote on EU Blue Card for skilled migrants

The proposed European Blue Card scheme for skilled immigrants will pass a crucial vote in the Civil Liberties Committee on Monday. more »

Talk of the Town: Locklear set up?

Talk of the Town brings you the latest in news, music and celebrity talk. more »

Palin and Princess Diana related

Genealogists from Ancestry.com discovered that Palin and the late princess descended from John Strong and his wife Abigail Ford. more »

EU celebrates UN declaration of human rights with tribute to dissidents.

Tunisian journalist Souhayr Belhassen has campaigned in defence of human rights for more than three decades. more »

Price of parenthood

For years parents in the EU have struggled to find good, affordable childcare facilities. In 2002, EU leaders declared childcare a high priority and, to show they meant business, set specific targets. more »

Pope decries faithless culture

Pope Benedict XVI opens a major Vatican meeting and urges man not to brush God aside by declaring himself master of the world. more »