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Union Members Aid Tsunami Victims
Unions
and union members are mounting relief efforts, donation drives and
recovery and rebuilding missions to help the millions of survivors
of the Dec. 26 tsunami that devastated coastal communities in Sri
Lanka, Thailand, India, Indonesia and other Indian Ocean nations.
More than 155,000 people were killed by the massive tidal waves
and tens of millions of survivors are in desperate need of clean
water, food, medical supplies and shelter.
The AFL-CIO
American
Center for International Labor Solidarity (Solidarity Center)
has established a Tsunami Relief Fund to which unions and individuals
may donate. The Solidarity Center is a nonprofit organization that
assists workers around the world who are struggling to build democratic
and independent trade unions.
Those
interested in contributing to the relief fund should make out a
check marked Tsunami Relief, payable to Solidarity Center Education
Fund, and send it to:
Tsunami
Relief Fund, Solidarity Center
1925 K Street, N.W., Suite 300
Washington, DC, 20006-1105.
No words
can describe the horror and suffering of the millions of people
affected, AFL-CIO President John Sweeney said in a letter
to the unions affiliated with the AFL-CIO, urging them to join in
the relief efforts.
Through
the Solidarity Center, the AFL-CIO is committed to providing workers
and their families with long-term support for housing, reconstruction
and other aid. As the rebuilding begins we must be ready to assist
our brothers and sisters in Asia who are fighting for their lives
and burying their dead.
In addition,
many unions around the worldfrom AFSCME
in the United States to the Swedish Metal Workers Unionhave
sent large donations for relief efforts. The International
Confederation of Free Trade Unions is working with unions around
the globe and in the tsunami-struck regions to bring immediate and
long-term help.
Overwhelming
Death and Destruction
Solidarity Center staff members in the affected areas are working
with local unions, government agencies and other partners to provide
help and relief to tsunami victims. In Sri Lanka, Solidarity Center
representative Pete Castelli and members of the Public Nurses Union,
along with several doctors, delivered medical supplies and food
to victims on Jan. 1.
In an e-mail,
Castelli says signs of the disaster grew increasingly vivid as the
group drove east from Colombo toward the coast.
Close
to Balapitiya, we started to see entire buildings collapsed, destroyed
and pushed to the other side of the road from the force of the waves.
Walls were crumbled and pieces of peoples lives, clothes,
furniture and tables were pushed up the side of trees and buildings,
he writes. The local hospital lost 21 doctors and nurses to the
deadly waves.
Near the coast,
the death and destruction was overwhelming, Castelli says. Passenger-filled
trains and buses were swept from tracks and roads and buried in
mud. Soldiers and other volunteers were collecting decomposing bodies
and taking them away for burial.
Along with Sri
Lanka, the Solidarity Center operates offices in India, Thailand
and Indonesia, and staff in those locations also are working with
local unions and officials to develop and deliver relief.
In addition,
hundreds of private relief agencies are receiving record amounts
of contributions. The U.S.
Agency for International Development has a list of relief agencies
on its website.
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