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MALE (AFP) Jan 09, 2005 The Maldives on Sunday blamed scientists for not sharing information that could have reduced the tsunami destruction across Asia as the UN secretary general vowed to improve infrastructure in hard-hit nations. Maldivian Foreign Minister Fathulla Jameel said the death and damage in the Indian Ocean atoll nation could have been minimised if authorities had been alerted when the tsunamis began after an undersea earthquake near Indonesia. "The research and information is there. But unfortunately the international scientific community works in strange ways. They don't want to share their information with us," Jameel told AFP. "No one told us about the tsunami. We were hit one and half hours after Sri Lanka. No one alerted us. Sri Lanka itself was hit several hours after the earthquake and I presume no one told them either." Shortly after Jameel's criticism, the visiting UN Secretary General Kofi Annan said he wanted not just replacement of the infrastructure destroyed in the tsunami-ravaged regions, but better structures put up. "The tsunami struck two continents, 12 countries. Some were hit harder than the others, they were all hit nonetheless," Annan told reporters here. "One will not just replace what was damaged, but build something better." He said he wanted it to be "recovery plus." Annan was visiting this Indian Ocean archipelago on the final leg of his three nation tour that has already taken him to Indonesia and Sri Lanka for a first-hand assessment of the destruction. Official figures show 82 people were killed and 26 reported missing in the Maldives when the December 26 tsunamis swept across the Indian Ocean, killing nearly 160,000 people. Maldivian President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom said the best way foreigners could help his country's recovery effort was by spending their holidays in this country known as one of the most exotic tourist destinations in Asia. Jameel said the seven-member South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation, which had been due to hold a summit in Dhaka Sunday, would now discuss the tsunami tragedy affecting four member states when they hold the rescheduled meet on February 7. However, he said a SAARC initiative alone to set up an early warning system would be insufficient. He called for a wider effort to involve all Indian Ocean states. "Having an early warning itself is not enough. Even if we get an early warning where can we go? Climb a coconut tree?" he asked, adding that sea walls needed to be built as on the main island Male. However, he said if the Maldives had been alerted to the impending sea surge on December 26, they would have been better prepared to meet the disaster as people on the beaches could have been warned. The Maldives is a low-lying nation of 1,192 coral islands scattered about 850 kilometers (550 miles) across the equator and most of the islets are less than a meter (three feet) above sea level. Visiting World Bank president James D. Wolfensohn said the country had suffered enormous emotional damage too because locals had been living with the fear of global sea level rise. "This (tragedy) has to be viewed in the context of the emotional damage it has caused. People had feared about global warming and sea level rise. And with this, the fear is that if it can happen once, it can happen again," Wolfensohn said. Government spokesman Ahmed Shaheed said infrastructure built over a period of two decades had been washed out. The loss of jetties on smaller islands is seen as a major blow to economic activity in far flung regions. He said Annan would be flown to the remote Kolhufushi island, an hour from the capital Male by sea plane, where all 878 inhabitants are now forced to sleep in traditional fishing boats known as dhonis. Annan will also visit Vilufushi island where all the 1,156 residents have been moved out to four nearby islands that escaped relatively unscathed in the sea surge caused by an underwater earthquake near Indonesia. All rights reserved. copyright 2018 Agence France-Presse. Sections of the information displayed on this page (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence, you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the content of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presse.
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