Tidal waves wash through houses at Maddampegama, about 60 kilometers (38 miles) south of Colombo, Sri Lanka, Sunday, Dec. 26, 2004. Massive waves triggered by earthquakes crashed into villages along a wide stretch of Sri Lankan coastline on Sunday, killing more than 2,100 people and displacing a million others. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe) An aerial view of Pattinapakam, a slum which was destroyed by a tsunami, near Madras, India. The death toll rose to more than 114,000 thursday, most killed by massive tsunamis that smashed coastlines after a magnitude 9.0 earthquake off Indonesia's coast on Sunday. (AP Photo/M.Lakshman) Debris are scattered around a standing mosque at Banda Aceh, the capital of Aceh province, more than two weeks after a devastating tsunami ravaged the capital and other coastal towns in northwest Indonesia. Houses and other buildings are no match to the force of the devastating tsunami but mosques are practically intact. The death toll in the catastrophe soared to 106,000 as Indonesian soldiers and rescue teams search for more victims and engage in massive clean up of the city. (APPhoto/Bullit Marquez) Relatives of people who were killed in tidal waves mourn at the government hospital in Nagappattinam, in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu. Nearly 3,000 people have died in India in the tidal wave disaster, with Tamil Nadu state accounting for most of the deaths, the government announced Monday. (AP Photo/Gautam Singh) Residents whose houses were destroyed by tsunami look for their belongings at Nechikuppam, near Madras, India. As the death toll from the earthquake-tsunami catastrophe soared to 117,000, nations donated US$500 million (euro370 million) toward the world's largest-ever relief effort. The death toll in India is above 7,300. (AP Photo/M.Lakshman) Lakshmi, center, Selvi, right, and Ariamala, rear with mask, grieve as earthmovers clear debris of their damaged house at a fishermen's colony which was hit by a tsunami, in Nagappattinam, in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu. At least 122,993 people are reported dead around southern Asia and as far away as Somalia on Africa's eastern coast, most killed by massive tsunamis that smashed coastlines after a magnitude 9.0 earthquake off Indonesia's coast on Sunday. The death tollin India is 8,942. (AP Photo/Gurinder Osan) A woman looks through the doorway of a house that was destroyed by the Dec. 26 tsunami at Nagappattinam, in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu. The tsunami, killed more than 6,000 people in Nagappattinam, destroyed houses and fishing boats. India's overall death toll from Dec. 26 devastating tsunami has risen by 15 to 10,151, the government said Tuesday. (AP Photo/Gautam Singh) Residents cover their faces as they pass through an area destroyed by tidal waves in Nagappattinam, in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu. About 23,000 people are reported dead around southern Asia most killed by massive tidalwaves that smashed coastlines after a magnitude 9.0 earthquake off Indonesia's coast on Sunday, followed by aftershocks in the region. The death toll in India is more than 4, 300. (AP Photo/Gurinder Osan) An Indonesian man walks through the shell of the Rahmatullah Lampuuk mosque in the village of Lhoknga, on the outskirts of Banda Aceh, Indonesia. The mosque was heavily damaged by the Dec. 26, 2004 tsunami, which destroyed almost all of the other buildings in the village. The tsunami ransacked coastlines across 11 countries in southern Asia and as far as eastern Africa, killing as many as 220,000 people. (AP Photo/Greg Baker) Kusol Wetchakul offers prayers for the soul of his sister at dawn along the beach near Khao Lak, Thailand. Wetchakul's sister was swept out to sea and believed drowned as she sold goods to tourists on the popular tourist beach just north of Phuket. Thailand continues to struggle with the massive disaster as more than 1,500 have been killed by the tsunami wave that struck last Sunday. (AP Photo/David Longstreath) A woman carries carpet on her head past tsunami destroyed houses in Banda Aceh, Indonesia. Aceh was hardest-hit by the quake-spawned tsunami that killed more than 162,000 in 11 countries in Asia and Africa. More than 115,200 of the dead were in Aceh, the northernmost province on Sumatra island. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko) Children tsunami survivors are entertained by Indonesian NGO (Non-Government Organization) volunteers (unseen) at an evacuation camp in Banda Aceh, the capital of Aceh province in northwest Indonesia. With schools reopening on Monday January 10, 2005, NGO volunteers have to fill up the children's educational needs with entertainment as they do not have schools to go to. The death toll in the devastating disaster two weeks ago has surpassed 104,000 in Indonesia alone. (AP Photo/Bullit Marquez) One of many times of ministrySchoolchildren hold candles as they participate in a public meeting to mark six month of the 2004 tsunami in Nagapattinam, India, Sunday, June 26, 2005. Six months after the devastating Dec. 26 earthquake and tsunami that killed 178,000 people in 11 countries and left another 50,000 missing and presumed dead, some Asian nations on Sunday held ceremonies to mourn those lost, while the survivors struggled to pick up the pieces. (AP Photo/Gautam Singh) ADRA Support boat (ADRA International/Todd Bruce) House being constucted in Bang Mo village (ADRA International/Todd Bruce) Handing over ceremony for the water system at Ao Khoie, Kura (ADRA International/Todd Bruce)