Tsunami Aftermath and Its Humanitarian Challenge

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It-s expected to be the costliest relief effort in history, many billions of dollars according to the United Nations. The human and economic costs and consequences of the earthquake and tsunamis that hit Southeast Asia over the weekend are rising daily. How have children been affected by the disaster? What about local economies that have been wiped out? How long will it take for the region to recover? Guest host Sara Terry explores the extraordinary global efforts underway to help the people and countries affected by this week-s massive earthquake and tsunamis in South Asia, and the long-term challenges raised by the tragedy, with humanitarian aid responders, Southeast Asia and development experts, historians, and a former member of the Canadian tsunami warning system.
  • Making News: Tsunami Death Toll Tops 44,000 Estimates of the number of lives lost in the tsunamis that swept across Southeast Asia to the shores of Africa have risen to 44,000, with the toll expected to rise still higher. The United Nations has said the relief effort may be the costliest in history. From Indonesia, Endy Bayuni, chief editor of the Jakarta Post, reports on one of the countries hardest hit by tsunamis, with more than 20,000 dead.
  • Reporter's Notebook: The Death of Author Susan Sontag One of America-s most influential - and often controversial -- intellectuals passed away today. A passionate human rights activist, Susan Sontag was the author of seventeen books and numerous essays, on subjects ranging from pornography to photography, from the choreography of George Balanchine to the causes of 9/11. Steve Wasserman, editor of the Los Angeles Times Book Review, shares highlights of their 30-year friendship.
Guest host Sara Terry is an award-winning writer and photographer, who has written for the Christian Science Monitor, New York Times, Fast Company, Rolling Stone and the Boston Globe. Her photo-documentary project, Aftermath: Bosnia's Long Road to Peace, will be published in September, 2005.

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Warren Olney