Friday, March 18th, 2011
Soeung Sophat (Washington, D.C.) and Bun Tharum (Phnom Penh)
blogs.voanews.com
When  an earthquake and tsunami hit  Japan on March 11, Cambodian students in  Japan found themselves in a  frightening situation. But through social  media and other  communications, most students were able to check on  each other during  and after the quake.
When  the shaking ended, all of  the students were accounted for. Except one.  Tea Seang Houng. The search  for Tea Seang Huong by her friends  demonstrates the important role  social media and the Internet have come  to play for Cambodians around  the world.
Tea  Seang Houng, who had been in  Japan since March 2010 and was studying  to be a translator, left Tokyo  on March 9 to visit her host family on  the northeast of the island of  Honshu. Before she left, on March 7, she  updated her Facebook profile,  telling 309 friends, in Chinese  (according to Google Translate): “A  couple of days I can go to Sendai.  Unfortunately, this is not holding  the mood to travel. Anyway, hope  this trip will be harvested [fruitful]  in Sendai.”
On March 8, a friend replied, in Japanese, “You be careful!”
Seang Hourng's message in Chinese language for her Facebook friends, telling them about her visit to Sendai.
At   2:46 pm on the afternoon of March 11, a massive earthquake began off   the northeast coast of Honshu—130 kilometers east of Sendai city, which   sits on the eastern edge of the Eurasian Plate, whose geological   collision into the Pacific Plate triggered the earthquake.
Sendai is the capital city of Miyagi Prefecture
The  quake, a magnitude of 9.0 on the  Richter scale, triggered a tsunami, a  massive wall of water 10 meters  high that swept across Honshu’s  northeastern coast. The tsunami  devastated the entire region, including  Sendai, leaving 1.15 million  households and businesses in and around  the city of 500,000 without  power or water, according to the city  government. The earthquake shook  buildings across the island, including  in Tokyo.
More than 200 Cambodian students in Japan experienced the quake, and Facebook became a main source of information for them.
“Huge  earthquake!!” Chea Poleng,  vice president of the Cambodian Student  Association in Japan, typed on  her iPhone just after the earthquake.  “First experience escape from  earthquake ><>
Also  that night, a Cambodian  student in Hong Kong, Sreng Nearirath,  reported on Facebook: “one of  Cambodian students named Ms. Tea Seng  Huong was spending her time at the  host family in the hardest-hit  Sendai and now could not be contacted  according the email of the  Cambodian Student Association in Japan (CSAJ)   “
By  then, news of the disaster  was well known worldwide. Footage of the  tsunami as it swept houses,  cars and debris inland was broadcast on  major news outlets. Many worried  than Tea Seng Huong had perished in  the disaster.
She did not. She survived.
Tea  Seang Huong, who is 27 years  old, was in a grocery store parking lot  when the earthquake hit. She  had been shopping in an underground  supermarket with friends but had  been unable to find what she was  looking for. They were on their way to  another store when the earth  began to shake.
“The  shake was like we’re  running over a big hole,” she told VOA Khmer  later. “My Japanese friend  told me to open the car doors, but stay  still. In front of me, I saw a  vehicle shaking. After half an hour of  the quake, aftershocks continued  slightly, and it was showering, so we  got out of the car. I saw a  billboard had fallen on the ground, and the  ground was torn apart. I  therefore felt terribly shocked.”
“When  I was in the parking lot, I  sent a text message via mobile phone to  one of my friends in Tokyo,”  she said in a phone interview.
That single text message was passed on through a network of friends and ultimately on through a Facebook network.
In  Hong Kong the following day,  Nearirath Sreng posted on Facebook: “We  have received confirmed  information from Seang Houng’s family that she  is safe now..Thanks God.”
Since  Sendai was hardly hit, she  may not be have access to internet or  mobile phone… and she may not  remember our number except her family’s  number in Cambodia. As we have  known Japanese mobile number are very  long and hard to remember.”
Modern communications had helped reassure Tea Seng Huong’s friends and family she was all right.
By  then, March 12, Japan was  still struggling to come to grips with the  scale of the disaster. In the  days to come, rescue efforts would find  few survivors and the death  toll would reach in the thousands. Today,  international attention is on a  series of nuclear reactors whose  cooling systems were damaged in  natural disaster.
Tea Seang Huong is safe for now, though Japan is still struggling to recover.
On  March 15, just after 1 pm,  she was back on Facebook. “Dear friends,”  she wrote, in English this  time. “I’ve just arrived Tokyo n my home.  Thank you very much for your  warm wishes n also very sorry to let you  all worrying about me. it was a  hard experience for me, but m very  happy n feel luck to b safe. contact  u again later.”

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