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Cop declared dead after 2004 tsunami ‘found ALIVE in psychiatric hospital after nervous breakdown over tragedy’
Jon Rogers
18 Mar 2021, 13:40 Updated: 18 Mar 2021, 13:45
A COP who was declared dead following the 2004 Boxing Day tsunami has reportedly been found alive in a psychiatric hospital after suffering a nervous breakdown.
The Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami on Boxing Day 2004 killed around 230,000, making it one of the biggest natural disasters ever.
Abrip Asep suffered a nervous breakdown after the tsunami struck western Indonesia Credit: Newsflash
Asep had been on duty the night the tsunami struck Credit: Newsflash
Abrip Asep’s family say the cop was on duty when the tsunami and earthquake struck Indonesia’s westernmost province of Aceh.
A relative, who has not been named, said they only realised Asep was still alive recently after photos were shared on a social media family chat group.
They said: “I couldn’t believe it, 17 years of no news and we thought that he passed away, we didn’t know he was still alive.”
The local police also confirmed that the man found in the psychiatric hospital was Abrip, reported as missing during the tsunami and later declared dead.
Despite suffering mental health issues after the disaster Asep has now been reunited with is family and is to be in good health, according to local media reports.
A spokesperson for the Aceh Regional Police said: “Even though he is experiencing mental illness due to the tsunami, his family is very grateful to have found him alive.”
Asep has now been reunited with his family Credit: Newsflash
Asep had been declared dead Credit: Newsflash
It is unclear why his family were not notified he was in the psychiatric hospital.
An underwater earthquake set off the tsunami in the early hours of December 26 2004.
At 12.59am GMT a 9.2 magnitude earthquake struck the western coast of Indonesia.
It was the third largest to ever be recorded in Sumatra, unleashing a force said to be 1,5000 times greater than the Hiroshima bomb.
The quake lasted around 10 minutes, and 15 minutes later the Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre issued a tsunami warning.
Around 30 minutes after the quake, a tsunami struck the northern tip of Indonesia, killing around 130,000 people.
Its waves are said to have reached 20-30 metres.
The tsunami struck Burma, Nicobar and Andaman Island, Thailand, the South East Coast of India, Maldives and Somalia.
Banda Aceh was the worst hit, with more than 60 per cent of its buildings destroyed.
At least 155 Brit tourists died while they were on holiday in south east Asia at the time.
Around 230,000 people are thought to have lost their lives in the earthquake and tsunami Credit: Newsflash
It is not known why the psychiatric hospital did not notify Asep's family Credit: Newsflash
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