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This is an archive article published on December 31, 2004

Child survivors get tsunami nightmares

Killer tsunamis are coming again, over and over, in the nightmares of children who survived the waves which swept them from their homes or p...

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Killer tsunamis are coming again, over and over, in the nightmares of children who survived the waves which swept them from their homes or picnics on Malaysia’s Penang island. Rahibah Osman’s 11-year-old son, Mohamad Fikri Rahim, who was caught by ferocious waves ‘‘as high as coconut trees and blackened with mud,’’ has troubled dreams in Penang General Hospital.

He cries in his sleep and shouts ‘‘No, no!’’, his mother, 49, told AFP. ‘‘I don’t know what he’s talking about, but when I ask him, he starts to cry,’’ she said.

Mohamad Fikri was playing with his 13-year-old sister outside their home about a kilometre away from the beachfront when massive tidal waves struck their village. Within seconds, huge black waves engulfed Rahibah’s house and her two children disappeared. Her daughter was swept into a neighbouring house and Rahibah managed to grab a pole. Boats were hurled into houses. Mohamad Fikri was nowhere to be seen.

‘‘When the waves died down, his cousin went into the water to search for him and managed to find him. He was covered in mud, even his mouth was full of mud,’’ she said. Mohamad was rushed to hospital and revived, but the nightmarish experience has changed him. —PTI

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