Last
Statistics as of Friday, December 31, 2004 as
reported in the Phuket Gazette just 5 days after the
Tsunami. These numbers went up about 20% over the next
few months.
PHUKET: As rescue workers in Khao Lak
continue the gruesome task of recovering the bodies of
those killed in the December 26 tsunami disaster, the
death toll from Phang Nga rose overnight to a staggering
3,689 corpses – more than double the figure reported at
4:30 yesterday afternoon.
The figures were released at 8 am today by the emergency
center at Phuket Provincial Hall.
In the six provinces affected, the death toll now stands
at 4,510 (2,092 Thai, 2,230 foreigners and 188 of
unknown nationality).A total of 9,849 were reported
injured and 6,475 people are listed as missing.
The fatality figure accounts only for bodies recovered;
the actual number of deaths is probably far higher, as
many people are thought to have been sucked out to sea
by tsunami undertow and will likely never be recovered.
Of the 3,689 bodies recovered in Phang Nga, 1,662 bodies
were somehow classified as Thais and 2,027 as
foreigners. Identification is becoming increasingly
difficulty as bodies decompose, rescue workers say. A
total of 1,272 people were reported as injured in the
province, with 2,123 people listed as missing.
In Phuket, however, the number of dead has been adjusted
down to 279 (151 Thais, 111 foreigners, 17 of unknown
nationality) from 282 yesterday afternoon. The toll of
injured stood at 1,272 and 2,123 people have been
reported missing.
In Krabi, there have been 367 reported deaths (108
Thais, 88 foreigners and 171 of unknown nationality),
2,649 injured and 1,913 reported missing.
Of great concern is the number of people missing at Phi
Phi Don Island, where only a handful of hotels remain
standing. Most of the dozens of hotels and guest houses
in the Ton Sai Bay area were located on a narrow stretch
of sand between two beaches, which appears to have been
hammered by the tsunami from both sides.
In December 2003, the Tourism Authority of Thailand
reported over 33,000 arrivals on the island, with the
average length of stay at hotels and guest houses being
2.7 days.
That would mean that, on average, some 1,065 tourist
arrived on Phi Phi Don each day. Multiplying this figure
by the average length of stay, there were probably no
fewer than 2,900 tourists staying overnight on Phi Phi
Don when the tsunami hit, and that figure would not
include the number of residents, day trippers and
workers.
The number of people on the island was probably higher,
given all the new hotel construction on Phi Phi over the
past year, and the fact that occupancy would have been
high with the New Year’s Holiday approaching.
Unfortunately, there are no figures currently available
as to how many people were rescued from the Phi Phi
Islands to help in estimating the actual number of
missing.