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Volunteers from throughout the region have flocked to Washington-area relief agencies as donations continue to arrive from across the country to help victims of the killer tsunami in southern and Southeast Asia.
The Fairfax County Urban Search and Rescue Team is ready to travel to the region's devastated coastlines, as are several Inova Health Systems doctors who are members of the International Search and Rescue Response Team.
However, it is still not certain who will be called upon to help.
"We have had a number of people volunteering, but we don't know when or if they will go," said Cecile Sorra, spokeswoman for Catholic Relief Services in Baltimore. "Right now, it is more important to assess the needs than just send people and not know what they should be doing or where is the area of greatest need."
More than 52,000 people were killed by the tsunami on Sunday morning, spawned by a magnitude 9.0 undersea earthquake off the Indonesian island of Sumatra.
The death count is expected to increase because the survivors -- including the thousands injured and millions left homeless by the wave surges -- now face diseases created by contaminated water supplies, no sanitation and other post-disaster problems.
The International Red Cross and other emergency-response teams are already in India and Indonesia providing aid and planning how best to deploy volunteers.
Peace Corps volunteers also could go to India, Indonesia and at least nine other nations damaged by the tsunami, but no decisions have been made.
The agency has a group of former volunteers, known as the Crisis Corps, who rely on their experience and acquired knowledge of language and culture to help after natural disasters.
"We'll know a little more by [today] or in a few more days," said Jennifer Borgen, an agency spokeswoman.







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