From the BBC:
“Tonga tsunami: Body of Briton
Angela Glover found, says brother”
The body of a British woman swept
away by the tsunami in Tonga has been found, her brother says. Nick Eleini told
broadcasters the family was "devastated" after Angela Glover died
trying to rescue her dogs. It is the first known death in the disaster, caused
when an underwater volcano erupted, sending a tsunami towards the Pacific
island nation. But communications have been badly damaged, making it hard to
establish the scale of the destruction.
The Hunga Tonga-Hunga Haʻapai
volcano, which erupted on Saturday, was about 40 miles (65km) north of Tonga's
capital Nuku'alofa, where Angela and her husband James had made their home. Speaking
outside their mother's home in Hove, Mr Eleini said he understood Angela's body
was found by her husband. Brighton-born Angela, 50, had been living in Tonga
since marrying James, he said, and they became "well-loved by locals and
ex-pats alike". "Angela and James loved their life in Tonga and
adored the Tongan people. In particular, they loved the Tongan love of family
and Tongan culture," he said. Mr Eleini said his sister was "a
beautiful woman" who "would walk into a room and just light it up with
her presence". "Angela was the heart of our family, she was the
emotional heart of our family," he said. "I will miss her and I will
think of her every day until the day I die. My mother is just broken at the
moment, she is just absolutely shattered."
After they married in 2015 and
moved to Tonga, James began running a tattoo parlour called the Happy Sailor,
employing and training Tongans, while Angela founded the Tongan Animal Welfare
Society, Mr Eleini said. She had "a deep love of dogs" and her
organisation sheltered and rehabilitated stray animals before trying to find
homes for them, he added. "The uglier the dog, the more she loved it. She
just loved them all, she was totally dedicated to it." She had worked in
London in the advertising industry before starting a new life in the south
Pacific. Mr Eleini said she loved the ocean and had been drawn to live in Tonga
by a childhood dream of swimming with whales. "It was Tonga that allowed
her to fulfil these dreams." Her brother said that despite the image of
idyllic island life, it could be "pretty tough" there, with cyclones
common at this time of year. "But it's also a beautiful life. She was
living her dream. She always wanted to live in a place like Tonga. We are so
proud she was able to fulfil that."
Meanwhile, Tongans overseas have
been left for two days unable to reach family and friends back home following
the disaster. Surveillance flights sent by New Zealand revealed
"significant damage" along the western coast of Tongatapu, the
country's main island. Television New Zealand's Pacific correspondent Barbara
Dreaver said it was expected to take at least two weeks before international
phones and internet links were restored, due to damage inflicted on a crucial
undersea cable. The Red Cross estimates 80,000 people may have been affected by
the tsunami, and dust from the volcano could contaminate water supplies. Some
officials have also voiced concern that relief efforts could spread Covid in
the country, which only recorded its first coronavirus cases in October.
^ This is such a sad story. Not
only because a human died, but because a human who clearly loved and cared for abandoned
and abused animals died. There is a special place in Heaven for people like
her. ^
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