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Disasters Statistics > Tsunami > Foreign tourists missing (most recent) by country

VIEW DATA:   Totals  
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Showing latest available data.

   Japan  12%
   Germany  11.4%
   Sweden  10.9%
   Switzerland  8.6%
   Austria  8.6%
   United States  7.8%
   United Kingdom  6.2%
   Belgium  6%
   Australia  6%
   Italy  5.3%
   Finland  3.7%
   Brazil  1.7%
   France  1.5%
   Norway  1.3%
   Hong Kong  1.2%
   New Zealand  1.1%
   Denmark  1%
   Taiwan  0.8%
   Turkey  0.8%
   Poland  0.7%


Rank   Countries  Amount  (top to bottom)   
#1  Japan:700 
#2  Germany:668 
#3  Sweden:637 
#4  Switzerland:500 
#5  Austria:500 
#6  United States:456 
#7  United Kingdom:359 
#8  Belgium:350 
#9  Australia:349 
#10  Italy:310 
#11  Finland:214 
#12  Brazil:99 
#13  France:90 
#14  Norway:77 
#15  Hong Kong:70 
#16  New Zealand:64 
#17  Denmark:57 
#18  Taiwan:45 
#19  Turkey:44 
#20  Poland:43 
#21  Russia:36 
#22  Singapore:31 
#23  Netherlands:30 
#24  Ireland:20 
#25  Argentina:18 
#26  Canada:13 
#27  Spain:11 
#28  Portugal:
#29  Korea, South:
#30  Czech Republic:
#31  Israel:
#32  South Africa:
#33  Mexico:
#34  Macau:
#35  Estonia:
#36  Luxembourg:
#37  Croatia:
Total: 5,835  
Weighted average: 157.7  


DEFINITION: Number of foreign tourists visiting the tsunami hit areas who are not reachable, (as of Saturday, Jan 22nd, 2005 - 06:30 PM GMT).

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COMMENTARY     

Thomas
31st December 2004
The disaster from sunday's tsunami in the Indian Ocean has rippled far beyond Asia, making it truly a tragedy felt across the globe. The disaster's reach is an unsettling reminder that globalisation has brought the world closer together in unexpected ways so that people now share the pain as well as profit from far-flung places. Even for people who have never left home, otherwise abstract calamities in distant lands now frequently have a familiar face.
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