Country for PR: China
Contributor: PR Newswire Asia (China)
Monday, January 24 2022 - 18:16
AsiaNet
CGTN: How is Tonga coping after being battered by a volcanic eruption and ensuing tsunami?
BEIJING, Jan. 24, 2022 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

CGTN's Liu Xin reached out to Tonga's Legislative Assembly Speaker Lord 
Fatafehi Fakafanua after volcanic eruptions and tsunami pounded the Pacific 
Island nation, for an update on the situation. CGTN was among the first Asian 
media outlets to speak to him. In her live interview, Liu Xin focused on the 
humanitarian aspect of the crisis and what was needed urgently to mitigate it. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vJDdKjFHyv0

"The shockwaves went right through the body"

Fakafanua was traveling to New Zealand when the undersea Hunga Tonga-Hunga 
Ha'apai volcano was smoldering. He was in New Zealand when it erupted and so, 
was able to communicate with the rest of the world.

His wife Krystal, who was in Tonga, told him how shockwaves vibrated the entire 
building where they live. It was a different feeling from an earthquake. The 
shockwaves went right through the body. 

While saddened by the loss of life -- three deaths had been confirmed by Jan 23 
-- Fakafanua told Liu Xin the authorities were relieved that the toll wasn't 
higher. He also shared some good news. Hopefully, schools would reopen soon, 
probably on January 31.

A long road to recovery

However, communication in Tonga was still far from being back to normal. While 
voice calls and texts were possible, emails were intermittent.

The politician felt the damage to infrastructure and the effects of the 
volcanic ash and the tsunami would probably be felt for years to come.

The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization echoed him, saying in a 
statement on January 21 that the ashfall could have detrimental effects on 
crops and livestock. Around 86 percent of Tongans are engaged in some form of 
agriculture – either farming or raising livestock or fishing. 

COVID major concern in relief efforts 

Fakafanua said the international community had responded swiftly in providing 
aid. However, "We need water, we need food."

Anti-COVID-19 efforts will also add to the difficulties in receiving external 
assistance. Tonga, which has reported just one case of COVID-19 so far, is 
receiving foreign relief assistance in a contact-less form to ensure there are 
no new infections. All international humanitarian supplies are being dropped 
off without the crew coming in contact with the islanders. China rushed cash 
assistance and emergency supplies on January 20.

The Point with Liu Xin, CGTN's  flagship Talk show program, is a 30-minute 
commentary on global news through Liu Xin's unique perspective. (387 words)  

https://news.cgtn.com/news/2022-01-22/How-did-people-in-Tonga-feel-Liu-Xin-spoke-to-its-parliament-speaker-172hqLbzJ2o/index.html 


SOURCE CGTN

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   Caption: How is Tonga coping after being battered by a volcanic eruption and 
ensuing tsunami?

Translations

Japanese