At least 39 dead as tsunami hits Samoas
12:00 AM CDT on Wednesday, September 30, 2009
PAGO PAGO, American Samoa – Towering tsunami waves spawned by a powerful earthquake swept ashore on two South Pacific island chains early Tuesday, killing at least 39 people and leaving dozens of others missing.
Hampered by power and communications outages, officials struggled to assess the casualties and damage. The quake, with a magnitude between 8.0 and 8.3, struck around dawn about midway between Samoa and American Samoa, a U.S. territory.
In Washington, President Barack Obama issued a disaster declaration, making federal funds available to victims in American Samoa.
Mike Reynolds, head of the National Park of American Samoa, said four tsunami waves 15 to 20 feet high roared ashore soon after the quake, reaching up to a mile inland.
Reynolds and another park service staffer had been unable to locate many of the park's 13 to 15 employees and 30 to 50 volunteers, said Holly Bundock, a National Park Service spokeswoman in Oakland, Calif. Reynolds told her that the park's visitor center and offices appeared to have been destroyed.
Residents in both Samoa and American Samoa reported being shaken awake by the quake, which lasted two to three minutes, then fleeing uphill out of fear of a tsunami.
Mase Akapo, a meteorologist for the National Weather Service in American Samoa, said that at least 19 people were killed in American Samoa and that 20 people died in neighboring Samoa.
Keni Lesa, an Associated Press reporter in Samoa, said three or four villages on Samoa's main island of Upolu had been wiped out by waves, with reports of people and cars swept out to sea. The villages were on the popular tourist coast near the southern town of Lalomanu.
New Zealander Graeme Ansell said the beach village of Sau Sau Beach Fale was leveled.
"It was very quick. The whole village has been wiped out," Ansell told New Zealand's National Radio from a hill near Samoa's capital, Apia. "There's not a building standing. We've all clambered up hills, and one of our party has a broken leg. There will be people in a great lot of need 'round here."
Schools and businesses were closed, and the Samoan capital was virtually deserted.
"Our house has been taken by the tsunami, and we have lost everything," Teresa Sulili Dusi told National Radio.
Local media said they had reports of landslides in the Solosolo region of the main island and damage to plantations in the countryside outside Apia.
The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center issued a general alert from American Samoa to New Zealand, warning of the prospect of a destructive wave.
Federal officials said strong currents and dangerous waves were expected from California to Washington state.
Rear Adm. Manson Brown, Coast Guard commander for the Pacific region, said the Coast Guard was assessing what resources to send to American Samoa.
The earthquake and tsunami were big, but not on the scale of the 2004 Indonesian tsunami that killed more than 150,000 across Asia the day after Christmas, said tsunami expert Brian Atwater of the U.S. Geological Survey in Seattle.
The 2004 earthquake was at least 10 times stronger than the 8.0 to 8.3 measurements being reported for Tuesday's quake, Atwater said.
Fili Sagapolutele,
The Associated Press