Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Three of Tonga’s smaller islands badly damaged by tsunami

- By Moussa Moussa and David Rising

SYDNEY >> Three of Tonga’s smaller islands suffered serious damage from tsunami waves, officials and the Red Cross said Wednesday, as a wider picture begins to emerge of the destructio­n caused by the eruption of an undersea volcano near the Pacific archipelag­o nation.

U.N. humanitari­an officials report that about 84,000 people — more than 80% of Tonga’s population — have been impacted by the volcano’s eruption, U.N. spokesman Stéphane Dujarric said, pointing to three deaths, injuries, loss of homes, and polluted water.

Communicat­ions have been down throughout Tonga since the eruption on Saturday, but a ship made it to the outlying islands of Nomuka, Mango and Fonoifua on Wednesday, and reported back that few homes remain standing after settlement­s were hit with 15-meter (49 feet) -high waves, said Katie Greenwood, the head of delegation in the Pacific for the Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, which had two people aboard the vessel to help assess the damage.

“Very unfortunat­e informatio­n has come to light overnight about the three islands that we were really worried about — that they have all suffered devastatin­g consequenc­es as an effect of these incoming waves,” she told The Associated Press in an interview from Fiji. “Most of the structures and dwellings on those islands have been completely destroyed.”

The U.N.’s Dujarric said “all houses have apparently been destroyed on the island of Mango and only two houses remain on Fonoifua island, with extensive damage reported on Nomuka.” He said evacuation­s are under way for people from the islands.

He said the most pressing humanitari­an needs are safe water, food and nonfood items, and top priorities are re-establishi­ng communicat­ion services including for internatio­nal calls and the internet.

“The clean-up of the internatio­nal airport continues, and it is hoped that it will be operationa­l on Thursday,” Dujarric said. As for the port, it is understood that ships will be able to dock on the main island of Tongatapu.

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