* New Zealand navy ships to arrive in Tonga on Friday
* Airport could re-open on Thursday
* Australian PM spoken to Tongan counterpart
* Japan, U.S., China and Australia offer aid
Jan 19 (Reuters) - Two New Zealand navy vessels will arrive
in Tonga on Friday carrying critical water supplies for the
Pacific island nation reeling from a volcanic eruption and
tsunami and largely cut off from the outside world.
At least three people were killed and hundreds of homes in
Tonga's smaller outer islands destroyed after Saturday's huge
eruption triggered tsunami waves that rolled over the islands,
home to 105,000 people.
With Tonga's airport smothered in volcanic ash and
communications hampered https://www.reuters.com/markets/funds/undersea-cable-fault-could-cut-off-tonga-rest-world-weeks-2022-01-18
by the severing of an undersea cable, information on the scale
of devastation has come mostly from reconnaissance aircraft.
But photographs posted on social media revealed more of the
devastation on Wednesday, showing coastal areas where trees and
buildings had been swept away and neighbourhoods covered with a
thick coating of ash. People worked together to clear the debris
and inspect the ruins of their homes.
The Red Cross said its teams in Tonga had confirmed that
salt water from the tsunami and volcanic ash were polluting the
drinking water of tens of thousands of people.
"Securing access to safe drinking water is a critical
immediate priority ... as there is a mounting risk of diseases
such as cholera and diarrhoea," said Katie Greenwood of the
International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent
Societies.
New Zealand said Tonga, one of the few countries to be free
of the new coronavirus, had agreed to receive two of its ships,
the Aotearoa and the Wellington, despite concerns about
importing a COVID-19 outbreak that would exacerbate its crisis.
Simon Griffiths, captain of the Aotearoa, said his ship was
carrying 250,000 litres of water, along with other supplies,
and had the capacity to produce another 70,000 litres a day.
The Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha'apai volcano erupted about 40 miles
(65 km) from the Tongan capital with a blast heard 2,300 km
(1,400 miles) away in New Zealand, and sent tsunamis across the
Pacific Ocean.
James Garvin, chief scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight
Center, said the force of the eruption was estimated to be the
equivalent of five to 10 megatons of TNT, or more than 500 times
that of the nuclear bomb the United States dropped on the
Japanese city of Hiroshima at the end of World War Two.
Waves reaching up to 15 metres (49 feet) hit the outer
Ha'apia island group, destroying all the houses on the island of
Mango, as well as the west coast of Tonga's main island,
Tongatapu, where 56 houses were destroyed or seriously damaged,
the prime minister's office said.
ASH AND RUBBLE
Tongan communities abroad have already posted images from
families on Facebook, giving glimpses of homes reduced to
rubble, fallen trees, cracked roads and sidewalks and everything
coated in grey ash.
Tonga has been largely offline since the volcano damaged its
sole undersea fibre-optic communication cable. Its owner said it
would probably take a month https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/tonga-likely-spend-month-without-internet-cable-2022-01-19
or more to fix.
Telecommunications operator Digicel said it had restored
some international phone service to Tonga through a satellite
link, though numerous attempts by Reuters to get through were
unsuccessful.
The archipelago has 176 islands, 36 of them inhabited. Its
main airport, Fua'amotu International, was not damaged by the
tsunami but was covered in ash, which has had to be cleared by
hand.
A Tongan official said it might be possible for aid flights
from New Zealand and Australia to begin on Thursday.
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison spoke with Tongan
Prime Minister Siaosi Sovaleni.
He said two Hercules aircraft were ready to go with
humanitarian supplies and telecommunications equipment, and that
a naval ship, the Adelaide, was preparing to depart from
Brisbane with water purification equipment and additional
humanitarian supplies.
Australia and New Zealand have also promised immediate
financial assistance.
The U.S. Agency for International Development approved
$100,000 in immediate assistance, and Japan said it would give
more than $1 million in aid as well as drinking water and
equipment to clear ash.
The Asian Development Bank was discussing with Tonga whether
it would declare a state of emergency to draw on a $10-million
disaster facility, senior bank official Emma Veve told Reuters.
China said it would send help including water and food when
the airport opened.
(Reporting by Praveen Menon, Kirsty Needham, Tom Westbrook,
Karen Lema, Kiyoshi Takenaka and Jane Wardell; Writing by Robert
Birsel and Philippa Fletcher; Editing by Kevin Liffey and Janet
Lawrence)