Much
tsunami clothing aid 'wasted'
Wednesday, October 5, 2005 Posted: 1504 GMT (2304
HKT) From CNN
Much aid ended up in warehouses, the Red Cross said.
LONDON, England -- Large amounts of clothing donated
for victims of the December 26 tsunami went to waste because
of poor communication, according to a report by the International
Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

The disaster highlighted how despite a huge international
response, duplication of effort and competition caused a chaotic
relief effort, the report released on Wednesday said.
"When a big disaster strikes, chaos is almost automatically
what follows," Matthias Schmale, international director
of the British Red Cross, told The Associated Press.
"World Disasters Report 2005" is a collection of
essays by experts, commissioned and published by the charity.
The Red Cross said aid agencies must communicate clearly to
donors and the public what they do and do not need.
In the tsunami response and others, unsolicited aid clogged
up the relief supply line and caused problems, it added.
Relief agencies should in future make joint assessments to
avoid such duplication, said Alastair Burnett, a senior official
from the Asia office of the British Red Cross.
International donors raised more than $11 billion for tsunami
relief in the nine months since it struck the Indian Ocean
region, the United Nations' emergency coordinator said.
More than 226,000 people were listed as dead or missing, while
1.7 million were displaced and more than 500,000 lost their
homes.
Much used clothing was either dumped in warehouses or by roadsides
because it failed to meet survivors' needs, the British Red
Cross said.
"People sometimes give tatty, worn out clothing. There
are issues of the dignity of the people we serve," Burnett
told AP.