HAMBANTOTA, Jan 8: Politics got in the way of tsunami relief efforts on Saturday with Sri Lanka stopping UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan from visiting disaster areas controlled by the Tamil Tigers.

In India's stricken Andaman and Nicobar Islands, aid workers complained the visit by Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had put the brakes on their attempts to reach the remote interior because officials were busy with his itinerary.

Nearly two weeks after monster waves hammered the coasts of Indian Ocean nations, hardest-hit Indonesia was still pulling thousands of bodies out of the rubble. Its toll rose to more than 104,000 - two-thirds of all those who died.

A day after saying he was shocked by what he saw in Indonesia, Mr Annan visited Hambantota, a popular tourist resort in southeastern Sri Lanka, which has been largely ruined and where exposed concrete foundations showed where houses once stood.

But Mr Annan was prevented from visiting the island's hard-hit north and east where he had been invited by Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) rebels, whose bloody two-decade war for autonomy is on hold thanks to a three-year ceasefire.

"I am here on a humanitarian mission. I would like to visit all the areas, but as you know I am here as a guest of the government and they set the itinerary," Mr Annan said.

UN officials said they had been striving to convince the Sri Lankan government, but to no avail.

A government official cited security concerns among others.

"(Annan) hasn't gone to Ireland and met with the IRA, he hasn't gone to Spain and met with Basque (rebels)," a government official said. "There doesn't seem to have been a precedent."

AID WORKERS' COMPLAINT: In India's worst-hit Andaman and Nicobar islands, aid workers said Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's tour had hit relief operations.

"For the last three days, officials have done little else except make pie charts, graphs, files for the prime minister's visit," said Vikram Tirkey, a doctor on the remote island chain.

Mr Singh said he would ensure houses and schools were quickly rebuilt.

"This is my solemn assurance that the government of India will spare no resources to come to the aid of all families affected by this tragedy," he said.

The government said India's toll from the Dec 26 tsunami had risen to 15,636, including 6,000 people feared to have died on the islands, which are home to endangered tribes.

SOME GOOD NEWS: Giving some much-needed good news, the United Nations said that by this weekend, relief workers would get at least some food and other emergency supplies to "every person in need" in Sri Lanka, a figure officials put at 750,000.

World Health Organization Director-General Lee Jong-wook said there were no signs of the feared epidemic among the 800,000 homeless in Sri Lanka.

In an unprecedented response to the widest-ranging natural calamity in living memory, governments and agencies have pledged more than five billion dollars in aid. Corporations and private individuals, from Hollywood stars and professional athletes to children donating lunch money, have promised 1.5 billion dollars more.

Rich nations pledged on Friday to suspend debt repayments by tsunami-hit nations, which may free resources for rebuilding.

World Bank President James Wolfensohn, visiting Sri Lanka, said the bank was also considering debt relief and would address the issue soon.

He also said the bank could hand out up to 1.5 billion dollars in aid but cautioned he was concerned about how funds are spent.

Forty nations lost nationals in the catastrophe in addition to the 13 countries swamped by the tsunami. Some 7,500 foreign tourists are dead, missing or unaccounted for.

Sri Lanka lost 30,000 people to the waves. India and Thailand were also badly hit, but most of the tsunami's more than 156,000 victims died in Aceh, on the northern tip of Indonesia's Sumatra island.-Reuters

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