Asone participant mentioned, "Because there are many hundreds of thousands of dead victims caused by the tsunami that is why we established this Aceh Tsunami Museum." Other participants stressed the role of the Aceh Tsunami Museum in "evacuation or disaster mitigation" and "disaster management learning (education)." Materials
tsunamidisaster. Banda Aceh, the capital of Aceh Province, expe-rienced significant damage because of the 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami. The inundation area reached more than 60% of the city at that time. Japan International Cooperation Agency reported that the city lost a third of the population, thousands of people were dislocated
Inthe city of Meulaboh, which is about 110 miles south of Banda Aceh, the provincial capital, one-third to one-half the pre-tsunami population of 60,000 lost their lives.
Theinsurgency in Aceh, officially designated the Rebellion in Aceh (Indonesian: Pemberontakan di Aceh) by the Indonesian government, was a conflict fought by the Free Aceh Movement (GAM) between 1976, and 2005, with the goal of making the province of Aceh independent from Indonesia.The aftermath of a strong military offensive in 2003 and the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake brought a peace
Themodel also shows, for a tsunami inundation depth of greater than 4 m, that a 10 year old mangrove forest would be mostly destroyed and that it would lose its force reduction capacity. Moreover, approximately 80% of a 30 year old mangrove forest would survive a 5 m tsunami and absorb 50% of the tsunami's hydrodynamic force.
Thedevastating tsunami of December 2004 left Banda Aceh a wasteland, a hellish landscape of debris. Tens of thousands of people lost their lives. But fast-forward nine years and the city is
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how many died in banda aceh tsunami