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Bodies piled on Asian coasts, tsunami kills 22,700

JAKARTA, Monday (Reuters) Rescuers scoured the sea for missing tourists and fishermen in Asia on Monday and fears of disease grew as emergency services struggled with rotting bodies from a devastating tsunami that killed more than 22,700 people.

The disaster spared no one. Western tourists were killed sunbathing on beaches, poor villagers drowned in homes by the sea and fishermen died in flimsy boats. The 21-year-old grandson of Thai King Bhumibol Adulyadej was killed on a jet-ski. "We have a long way to go in collecting bodies," said Thailand's Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who expected the 866 death toll in his country to go much higher.

One Thai official estimated up to 30 percent of the dead were foreigners. Families around the world anxiously sought news of loved ones on Christmas holidays whose dreams of sunshine in the east were turned into scenes of disaster.

Calls from worried relatives swamped hotlines set up by ministries and tour firms. "Our paradise turned into hell," said American tourist Moira Lee, 28, who was on Patong Beach in Phuket, Thailand.

With at least seven Asian nations and one in East Africa counting the human and economic cost of the tragedy, Western nations pledged aid and geologists asked why warning systems that could have saved thousands of lives were not in place.

Struggling with destroyed communications, power outages and swamped and debris-strewn roads, emergency workers were shocked by the sheer scale of the catastrophe. "We are used to dealing with disasters in one country. But I think something like this spread across many countries and islands is unprecedented. We have not had this before," Yvette Stevens, a U.N. emergency relief official, said in Geneva.

Other areas worst affected by Sunday's tsunami were southern India, where more than 6,600 were listed dead, northern Indonesia with nearly 5,000 drowned and Thailand's devastated southern tourist isles and beaches.

Deaths were also reported in Bangladesh, Malaysia, the Maldives, Myanmar and

distant Somalia where 38 people were killed by swollen seas. The earthquake triggered a tsunami of up to 10 metres (33 feet) high, sometimes travelling as fast as an airliner, flattening houses, hurling fishing boats onto roads, sending cars spinning through swirling waters into hotel lobbies and sucking sunbathers, babies and fishermen out to sea. Hundreds of thousands were left homeless.

Smaller tremors followed Sunday's earthquake, the world's biggest since 1964 and the fourth-largest since 1900.

The tsunami had echoes of another apocalyptic seismic event that originated in Indonesia when the island volcano of Krakatoa erupted in 1883 causing a tsunami that killed 36,000 people.

Indonesian rescue workers pulled hundreds of bodies from treetops, rivers and wrecked homes in Aceh province, desperate to clean up before disease could spread from rotting bodies polluting water supplies.

Volunteers laid children's bodies in rows under sarongs at makeshift morgues. Others were stacked in white fish crates. "I am hoping there are still enough coffins available," said Mustofa, mayor of Aceh's Bireuen regency. One senior official said the toll in Aceh province could rise to 10,000. Deaths were previously put at 3,000.

In Banda Aceh, capital of Aceh near the quake's epicentre, troops were unloading piles of bodies from military trucks on Monday after the tsunami swept several kilometres inland.

In the centre of the sprawling city, dozens of bodies were scattered on streets, while masses of debris - a mix of mud, ruined trucks and cars, mangled motorcycles and wood from shattered houses - had yet to be cleared.

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