(1 Jun 2006)
1. Wide of family in tent
2. Close up of mother, 26-year-old Riwi Asah
3. Close up of father, 26-year-old Ali Wafaah
4. Close up of daughter crying, 18-month-old Al-zahra
5. Close up of son eating, 4-year-old Mohammad Rizky
6. Wide of family in tent
7. SOUNDBITE: (Indonesian) Ali Wafaah, Earthquake victim and father of family:
"The reason I haven't gone back to work is because everything is not safe yet and I would be worried about leaving my family here alone."
8. Mother sitting with children
9. Various of cooking area, cooking utensils
10. Various of blankets
11. Hanging lantern
12. Child's bowl
13. Various of grandfather, 55-year-old Ponijian, watching mother washing baby from bucket on roadside
14. SOUNDBITE: (Indonesian) Ali Wafaah, Earthquake victim and father of family:
"I hope that my relatives will help me by donating some money so I can start working again because I have 2 children who need milk everyday, but we have none left."
15. Various of family's destroyed house
16. Ponijian standing in front of debris
17. Cutaway of debris and household items
18. SOUNDBITE: (Indonesian) Ponijian, Earthquake victim and grandfather of family:
"If the house is fixed then I will return to work to continue to help my family make their living. I can't think of work if my house is still like this."
19. Various of Ponijian looking through family photographs
20. Ponijian points at picture of his wife when she was young
21. Various of Ponijian with photographs
22. Various of Ponijian and Ali Wafaah at their tent, Mohammad runs over
23. SOUNDBITE: (Indonesian) Ponijian, Earthquake victim and grandfather of family:
"I still have the spirit to continue my life for the sake of my children and grandchildren as long a life as God gives me. I will keep trying my best"
24. Various of parents sitting in tent, with two children
STORYLINE:
Ali Wafaah and his young family remain dazed and unsure of their future after Saturday's 6.3-magnitude quake on Java island that destroyed their home in Bantul.
Ali normally makes a living selling souvenirs to tourists while his wife Riwi Asah takes care of their two young children.
But now Ali's stock of goods has been mostly destroyed, tourists have fled the area, and Ali is unwilling to leave his family alone in order to look for work.
They are currently living in a tent along with many other refugees, far from their old home but in an area they hope is reachable by aid and where they can acquire necessities.
Ali's father Ponijian also stays with the family.
The family has only a few basic possessions with them: equipment for cooking, blankets and a lantern for lighting their tent at night.
Help from Indonesians in the area has sustained them thus far.
They wash by asking at the few houses still standing nearby, but are normally forced to wait in a queue for at least an hour.
They bring surplus water back in buckets to bathe their children.
Ali hopes that some distant relatives in Jakarta and nearby Solo will find them and send money, but he has no way of contacting them at this point.
Ponijian returned to see their ruined home 5 days after the quake - he has lived there for 35 years and does not want to move anywhere else.
Meanwhile, regions previously not reached by relief teams in remote areas of Indonesia's quake zone reported hundreds of additional deaths, officials said on Thursday.
The death toll now stands at 6,234.
The UN World Food Programme said 5 (m) million US dollars was needed over the next few months to pay for emergency rations of enriched noodles and high energy biscuits.
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