The Guardian Australia

Lombok earthquake: new quake hits as death toll from earlier tremor tops 300

- Kate Lamb in Jakarta and agencies

An earthquake with a magnitude of 6.2 has hit Indonesia’s Lombok island, less than a week after a 6.9-magnitude tremor that is believed to have killed more than 300 people.

Thursday’s earthquake struck just after midday, sending panicked residents into the streets. According to informatio­n from Indonesia’s meteorolog­y agency the epicentre of the quake was 6km north-west of the island with a depth of 12km.

Residents in the city of Mataram and north Lombok, the areas hardest hit this past week, panicked after Thursday’s strong tremor, pouring out of their homes and evacuation posts. “There was one person who fell from the stairs because the tremor shook the stairs when they tried to get out of the building,” Rangga, one local resident in central Lombok, told CNN Indonesia.

Thursday’s was the biggest of 355 aftershock­s since the 6.9-magnitude quake last Sunday, which displaced more than 154,000 people, many of whom have been sleeping in makeshift tents by the roadside and in their fields.

A short video posted by Indonesia’s national disaster agency spokespers­on, Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, on his Twitter account showed that Thursday’s quake has caused additional damage, with some buildings and power lines collapsed.

The full extent of the accumulati­ve damage caused by the Thursday quake was not immediatel­y known.

Indonesia’s disaster and rescue agencies, as well as local officials and the military, which are coordinati­ng on relief efforts, are still trying to work out the exact death toll caused by Sunday’s powerful earthquake. Rescuers are continuing to retrieve bodies and attempting to get basic supplies such as food and water to the worsthit areas.

Data from the national army has indicated that as many as 381 have died, while the governor of West Nusa Tenggara put the figure at 226, a number echoed by those from the search and rescue agency. The national disaster agency has reported 131 deaths so far.

The disaster agency spokespers­on said it was not uncommon for confusion about exact deaths tolls to arise during emergency and crisis situations, as has occurred in previous natural disasters such as an earthquake in Padang in 2009 and the eruption of Mount Merapi in 2010.

Straddling an area of high volcanic activity known as the “Ring of Fire”, Indonesia is highly prone to earthquake­s.

This is the third large earthquake to strike Lombok in the past month. On 29 July, a 6.4-magnitude quake killed 17 people and briefly stranded hundreds of trekkers on the slopes of the volcano, Mount Rinjani.

 ?? Photograph: Adek Berry/AFP/Getty Images ?? Indonesian search and rescue personnel in Lombok after a 6.2-magnitude aftershock hit on Thursday.
Photograph: Adek Berry/AFP/Getty Images Indonesian search and rescue personnel in Lombok after a 6.2-magnitude aftershock hit on Thursday.

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