No
need for anyone to resign says Minister Fowzie
By Marisa de Silva
Environment Minister A.H.M. Fowzie has scoffed at
calls for his resignation over the alleged failure of the Geological
Bureau officials to warn the country of the tsunami disaster on
December 26. He also said he did not think it necessary for the
officials to face a disciplinary inquiry.
Mr.
Fowzie, under whose purview the Geological Survey and Mines Bureau
(GSMB) comes, told The Sunday Times there was no need to take disciplinary
action or hold an inquiry. “However, since there is growing
protest about this, we will appoint a committee," he said.
As
the minister in charge, Mr. Fowzie said he did not see any reason
to resign but added that if anyone was interested in his portfolio
they could take it.
The
Minister's comments followed reports that the available evidence
could have been picked up by officials of the GSMB to provide sufficient
warning to the people after the tsunami first hit the Ampara district
around 8.30 a.m. and thereafter gradually hit the rest of the coastal
areas within the next two hours.
Meteorological
Department sources said that the first warning about the increasing
water levels of the sea had been reported after the waves hit the
Trincomalee area (after hitting the Ampara district ), while the
information about the earthquake of Indonesia was already available
on the internet and was available with the GSMB in Colombo.
The
Meteorological Department had issued a warning about the rising
water levels, but the warning came after most of the country's coastal
areas were hit by the tsunami.
Director,
Meteorological Department, T.H.P. Dharmaratna, told The Sunday Times
that even though monitoring earthquakes wasn't part of their job,
they had done their best to disseminate the warning to the public
through the electronic media by providing information that the water
levels were rising in the north-eastern coast.
However,
when pressed to say what time he had contacted the TV and radio
stations, he said he couldn't recall the exact time. Meanwhile,
Acting Dean and Head, Department of Physical Science, University
of Rajarata, Dr. B.A. Karunaratne says, that the Seismometer based
at the University 'Computer Centre', is only a data receiving Centre
which functions automatically and transmits the received data to
the main operational Centre at the University of Peradeniya, via
telephone lines.
"However,
as there is no separate telephone line by which these transmissions
can be made, the University has to make do with using the same line
as the Computer Centre. We have requested a separate telephone line
for this data transmission but, have not yet got one," Dr.
Karunaratne said. |