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There was extreme damage throughout Asia |
Trinidad and Tobago will donate $2 million to the Asia tsunami relief efforts bringing the amount pledged by regional governments to more than $4 million.
Prime Minister Patrick Manning said although Trinidad and Tobago was small and had limited financial resources, its position as a global player in the energy sector brought certain responsibilities to the world community.
He said the Trinidad and Tobago government was specifically responding to UN Secretary General Kofi Annan's call for assistance to the tsunami recovery efforts.
"In this the hour of need of 12 countries in south-east Asia, the Government of Trinidad and Tobago felt that we could not stand idly by and not do anything.
Earlier this week, a telethon in Guyana received pledges of more than $60,000 (Guy34.6 million) in the latest Caribbean fundraiser for the Asian tsunami victims.
Despite its billing as one of the poorest countries in the hemisphere, Guyana has been actively joining the aid effort.
On Tuesday, President Bharrat Jagdeo announced a grant of $50,000 to the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) to support humanitarian work among the region's children.
More than 150,000 were killed and 500,000 were rendered homeless from the December 26 tsunami which swept across six Asian nations.
In many other Caribbean countries, governments, the private sector and communities have been involved in similar fund-raising.
This week the Jamaica government set up a special national tsunami aid fund, to which it made an initial contribution of $244, 412 (J$15 million).
Vulnerability
"I appeal to Jamaicans both at home and in the Diaspora to give as generously, as this is truly a global effort," Jamaican prime minister P.J. Patterson said in a statement. "Our common humanity deserves no less."
The issue of a coordinated regional response to the disaster is being discussed this week at a meeting of the Caribbean Community (Caricom) Council of Ministers in Georgetown.
In the wake of the devastation, the Caribbean Disaster Emergency Response Agency (CDERA) said it was having talks with a number of partners including the Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre, the University of Puerto Rico Seismic Network, the University of the Virgin Islands and the Seismic Research Unit at the University of the West Indies on the establishment of a tsunami early warning system for the Caribbean.
The United Nations also said Wednesday that it was accelerating efforts to introduce a global system for tsunamis to prevent future earthquakes from causing so much damage and loss of life, but was unable to say when it might be ready.
Other areas said to be at risk from tsunamis include the coastlines bordering the Caribbean and Mediterranean Seas.