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LAST UPDATE: Thursday March 31, 2005

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A True Hero

By Scott Murray

Dr Pornthip Rojanasunan (above) - Thailand's best known pathologist and deputy director of the Central Institute of Forensic Science - worked around the clock for weeks leading forensics teams and rescue workers recovering and identifying thousands of bodies in the severely hit Khao Lak area (north of Phuket) following the tsunami tragedy.

A village woman (right) from Ban Naam Ken, near Takuapa (north of Khao Lak) sorts through donated clothing for her family and neighbours after their coastal homes were destroyed by tsunami waves.

In every great tragedy, there are great heroes. In the wake of the tsunami disaster none was more front-and-centre than Dr.Pornthip Rojanasunan, the country’s best-known forensic pathologist and deputy director of the Central Institute of Forensic Science. In much the same way Rudy Giuliani rallied the city of New York immediately after the 9-11 tragedy, Pornthip did the same with those retrieving and identifying bodies at Wat Yan Yao, in Phang Nga’s Takua Pa District. She hardly slept, and yet she kept her forensic team motivated and focused while they worked through scenes of carnage most of us couldn’t imagine in our worst nightmares.

Recovering, moving and then identifying the victims was no easy task. They just never stopped coming. It wasn’t like a plane accident, where you had a finite number of bodies; you never knew how many bodies the army and rescue teams were going to bring in. Her team of young doctors, nurses and volunteers could in no way be prepared for the horrors they were to experience. Yet Pornthip, with her grace, manner and sense of humour, was able to get them to work through their own trauma to get the victims identified so their relatives could start finding closure.

The smell of formalin, the endless body bags, the stench and sight of the corpses, the agony of the loved ones lingering outside the temple waiting for the identification of family members: these memories, together with the smells, will stay with all those who worked with Pornthip in this great task of victim identification. But one thing that they will all remember is how Pornthip kept them all together and made them feel part of her team, and how she was constantly looking out for them.

With her casual dress, spiked hair and blue jeans, Pornthip put a human face on the tragedy. Yet she never lost sight of what she had do, which was identifying the victims as quickly as possible and minimizing the spread of disease.

In addition, she was able to maintain her dignity and decorum, despite quarrels with the Thai police and foreign forensic experts, and despite having to exhume and re-examine a large number of bodies. Pornthip was the hero of this tragic event, and the Thai people should be (and are) very proud that they had such a compassionate forensic pathologist to help them work through this terrible tragedy.

 

Down But Not Out

by Sam Wilkinson

Ban Naam Kem, Takuapa

Loading up our old Nissan on a bright January morning proved a simple enough procedure: cameras and water enough for a Sahara crossing; cushions for the pickup's "bed travellers", and a hefty supply of sun cream all went in the back. My companions, three recently arrived German doctors—bearing 500,000 baht in relief funds donated by neighbours and friends in their native Ruhr region—were anxious to see exactly where their euros were going.

Driving north from Phuket, we saw little evidence of the disaster but, once past the unofficial demarcation zone in the hills above Khao Lak, I pulled over next to a cliff-side restaurant commanding a northerly sweep of the devastated beaches. The restaurant owner, having filmed the tidal waves from the privileged position of his 30-metre-high balcony, was doing a brisk trade selling (at 500 baht a throw) copies of his decidedly amateur VCD film of the tsunami's initial thrust. A stylishly dressed Bangkok mother-and-son couple jabbering into mobile phones stopped dead at the images on the screen.

As we motored through the moonscaped wreckage that was once thriving, colourful Khao Lak, one of the doctors yelled from the back that we should head straight up to Takuapa. Once there, the small group donated a large amount to the regional hospital, which, only a week earlier, had acted as an ad hoc open-air morgue and information centre. The morgue has subsequently been moved one kilometre north. To make the best of our donations, the hospital director suggested that we go to the destroyed fishing village of Ban Naam Kem, some 20 kilometres south of Takuapa.

Smiling faces greeted us as we parked. An old woman, almost buried under a mountain of donated clothing, sifted and sorted for her family and friends in the late afternoon light; a man executed a stiff military salute and then relaxed, beaming at us. At the ad hoc donations box there was a conglomeration of culture and language. Two young Americans tried to explain that they'd driven from Krabi that day to present their sizable cash gift, sent from their small Californian community. Then they thanked us in fluent German for our translations.

Formalities over, we turned to leave but the sound of laughter and amplified music led us around the corner to a heartening sight. Swedish Jonas and Dutch Christie were giving a performance of mor lahm—upbeat Thai country music—while chatting with a surprised and delighted crowd. Children grasped at Christie's hands as Jonas joked gruffly, yet amiably, over the mike with the survivors of the past December's catastrophe. With their fluent Thai, and an evident and commendable assimilation into local culture, they're justifiably regarded as major foreign stars on the Kingdom's TV channels. So, for the devastated villagers of every age, it was an afternoon they'll never forget.

Despite the generosity of the Germans and Americans, however, overall donations to the stricken village, posted on a board by the donation centre, seemed meagre when compared, for example, to the instant rush to support Phuket's "Sea Gypsy" communities. Baan Naam Kin's fishermen need new boats and motors before they can begin feeding their families and community; a whole new village must be rebuilt from scratch; orphans will need sponsored education and vocational direction.

At the moment, the best way to understand and lend support to this village is to go there and see for yourself. It lies just over an hour's drive north from Phuket. Follow the signs for Takuapa.

For more information see : www.thaitogether.org