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    Connecting through calamity

    JAKARTA (AFP) – The world’s deadliest tsunami hit nations around the Indian Ocean two decades ago before social media platforms flourished, but they have since transformed how we understand and respond to disasters – from finding the missing to swift crowdfunding.

    When a 9.1-magnitude quake caused a tsunami that smashed into coastal areas on December 26, 2004, killing more than 220,000 people, broadcasters, newspapers and wire agencies were the main media bringing news of the calamity to the world.

    Yet in some places, the sheer scale took days to emerge.

    Survivor Mark Oberle was holidaying in Thailand’s Phuket when the giant waves hit Patong beach, and penned a blog post to fend off questions from family, friends and strangers in the days after the disaster.

    “The first hints of the extent were from European visitors who got text messages from friends back home,” said Oberle, adding people initially thought the quake was local and small, when its epicentre was actually near western Indonesia, hundreds of miles away.

    “I wrote the blog because there were so many friends and family who wanted to know more. Plus I was getting many queries from strangers. People were desperate for good news tales,” said the United States (US)-based physician, who helped the injured.

    The blog included images of cars ploughed into hotels, water-filled roads and locals fleeing on scooters because rumours produced “a stampede from the beach to higher ground”.

    Bloggers were named ‘People of the Year’ by ABC News in 2004 because of the intimacy of first-hand accounts like those published in the days following the tsunami.

    ABOVE & BELOW: Photo illustrations show the logos for Threads,Instagram; and Bluesky. PHOTO: AFP
    PHOTO: AFP

    But today billions can follow major events in real-time on social media, enabling citizen journalism and assistance from afar, despite the real risk of rumour and misinformation.

    During Spain’s worst floods for decades in October, people voluntarily managed social media accounts to assist relatives trying to locate their missing loved ones.

    After Turkiye’s devastating earthquake last year, a 20-year-old student was rescued thanks to a post of his location while buried under the rubble.

    Two decades ago, the online social media landscape was vastly different.

    Facebook was launched early in 2004 but was not yet widely used when the tsunami hit.

    One of YouTube’s founders reportedly said an inspiration for the platform’s founding in early 2005 was an inability to find footage of the tsunami in its aftermath.

    Some tsunami images were posted on photo site Flickr. But X, Instagram and Bluesky now allow for instant sharing.

    Experts are clear that more information saves lives – hours lapsed between the tremor’s epicentre near Indonesia and the giant waves that crashed into Sri Lanka, India and Thailand’s coastal areas.

    A professor at Northeastern University Daniel Aldrich conducted interviews in India’s Tamil Nadu where many said they had no idea what a tsunami was and had no warnings in 2004.

    “In India alone nearly 6,000 people were taken by surprise and drowned in that event,” he said.

    Mobile apps and online accounts now quickly publicise information about hospitals, evacuation routes or shelters.

    “Social media would have provided an immediate way to help locate other survivors and get information,” said Jeffrey Blevins, head of journalism at the University of Cincinnati.

    Oberle also noted that “knowing what help was locally available… would have provided a clearer perspective of what to expect in the days to come”.

    Beyond emergency rescue, social media clips can also be a boon to understanding a disaster’s cause.

    When giant waves crashed into Indonesia’s Aceh province, footage remained largely confined to handheld camcorders capturing the carnage.

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