2009.04.22: April 22, 2009: Headlines: COS - Tonga: Disaster Relief: OhmyNews International: Tonga RPCV April Watson Miller writes: Niuafo'ou Island Awaits Food and Supplies after cyclone earlier this month
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2009.04.22: April 22, 2009: Headlines: COS - Tonga: Disaster Relief: OhmyNews International: Tonga RPCV April Watson Miller writes: Niuafo'ou Island Awaits Food and Supplies after cyclone earlier this month
Tonga RPCV April Watson Miller writes: Niuafo'ou Island Awaits Food and Supplies after cyclone earlier this month
Niuafo'ou is currently home to over 700 people, over 50 percent children, including an Austrian teacher who has worked at the local high school since the 1990's, named Ferdinando Valentinotti. Incidentally, Niuafo'ou was also my home from 2002-2004 as I taught English as a US Peace Corps. Making do with little above nothing, we stretched supplies to last between infrequent planes and boats and always rejoiced on the rare days when the world touched us. Family members and friends abroad consistently sent necessities enabling the island to survive. So, I became filled with concern when I received this short email from Ferdinando on April 20, 2009: "Myself is trying to survive since there is no more 'Olovaha coming here and no other supply boat. We run a short day program now to give students time to go fishing to the crater lake or the sea shore. It definitely feels like living on a very remote island. No planes either. No schedules. It has never been like this before, not for the last ten years. Never mind. Now I can find out that life is more than just eating and drinking."
Tonga RPCV April Watson Miller writes: Niuafo'ou Island Awaits Food and Supplies after cyclone earlier this month
Niuafo'ou Island Awaits Food and Supplies
No aid has come to southern Pacific Ocean island after cyclone earlier this month
April Watson Miller (AprilDawn)
Published 2009-04-22 13:03 (KST)
Caption: Niuafo'ou caldera is seen from its eastern rim, displaying both caldera lakes, the large Vai Lahi (background) and the much smaller Vai Si'i (foreground). Niuafo'ou ("Tin Can Island") is a low, 8-km-wide island that forms the summit of a largely submerged shield volcano. The 5-km-wide caldera is mostly filled by Vai Lahi, whose lake bottom extends to below sea level. Historical eruptions, mostly from circumferential fissures, have been recorded since 1814 and have often damaged villages on this small ring-shaped island. Photo by Paul Taylor (published in Taylor and Ewart, 1997).
Over 700 people are cut off from the world and growing hungry. Few know, and no one is doing anything.
Surrounded by hundreds of kilometers of turbulent sea, Niuafo'ou Island is considered one of the most remote inhabited islands on Earth. No electricity exists save generators occasionally running on rare gasoline, and the limited phone service has sporadically operated since 1998.
The island is an active volcano encased in jagged lava rocks, jutting in all directions like plates of broken glass, constantly hacked and licked by fierce waves. This has made seafood a rarity to the people there. Lack of rainwater often hinders crops, and an increasingly sulfuric freshwater crater lake is killing the tilapia fish farmed there since the 1980's.
However, Niuafo'ou is currently home to over 700 people, over 50 percent children, including an Austrian teacher who has worked at the local high school since the 1990's, named Ferdinando Valentinotti.
Incidentally, Niuafo'ou was also my home from 2002-2004 as I taught English as a US Peace Corps. Making do with little above nothing, we stretched supplies to last between infrequent planes and boats and always rejoiced on the rare days when the world touched us.
Family members and friends abroad consistently sent necessities enabling the island to survive. So, I became filled with concern when I received this short email from Ferdinando on April 20, 2009:
"Myself is trying to survive since there is no more 'Olovaha coming here and no other supply boat. We run a short day program now to give students time to go fishing to the crater lake or the sea shore. It definitely feels like living on a very remote island. No planes either. No schedules. It has never been like this before, not for the last ten years. Never mind. Now I can find out that life is more than just eating and drinking."
After receiving this email, I began a massive, unfruitful effort to discover more information about what could be causing this. Bad weather may be the main contributor, as Niuafo'ou has no wharf and the rocky shores are impenetrable if any waves exist. However, other reasons, such as the lack of air service, remain hidden.
Aid must be activated. Since no interaction occurred during the past few months, a massive amount of mail, medical supplies, food and necessities must be weighing down the postal service and other supply carrier services in the kingdom's other ports.
Also stranded Niuans on other islands and non-Niuans on Niuafo'ou may be anxiously awaiting the next boat to attempt a trip, and desperately seeking work during the meantime.
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Headlines: April, 2009; Peace Corps Tonga; Directory of Tonga RPCVs; Messages and Announcements for Tonga RPCVs; Disaster Relief
When this story was posted in May 2009, this was on the front page of PCOL:
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Story Source: OhmyNews International
This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; COS - Tonga; Disaster Relief
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