Lethbridge Herald

Desperatio­n grows after quake

DEATH TOLL RISING IN INDONESIA

-

Trucks carrying food for desperate survivors of the earthquake on Indonesia’s Sulawesi island rolled in with a police escort Tuesday to guard against looters, while the death toll from the disaster soared past 1,200.

Four days after the magnitude 7.5 earthquake and tsunami struck, supplies of food, water, fuel and medicine had yet to reach the hardest-hit areas outside Palu, the largest city that was heavily damaged. Many roads in the earthquake zone are blocked and communicat­ions lines are down.

“We feel like we are stepchildr­en here because all the help is going to Palu,” said Mohamad Taufik, 38, from the town of Donggala, where five of his relatives are still missing. “There are many young children here who are hungry and sick, but there is no milk or medicine.”

The death toll reached 1,234, national disaster agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said in Jakarta, the capital. Hundreds of other people were injured, and scores of uncounted bodies could still be buried in collapsed buildings in Sigi and Balaroa under quicksandl­ike mud caused by Friday’s quake.

More than 25 countries have offered assistance after Indonesian President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo appealed for internatio­nal help. Little of that, however, has reached the disaster zone, and increasing­ly desperate residents grabbed food and fuel from damaged stores and begged for help.

An aircraft carrying 12,000 litres (3,170 gallons) of fuel had arrived. and trucks with food were on the way with police escorts to guard against looters. Many gas stations were inoperable either because of quake damage or from people stealing fuel, Nugroho said.

The frustratio­n of waiting for days without help has angered some survivors.

“Pay attention to Donggala, Mr. Jokowi. Pay attention to Donggala,” yelled one resident in a video broadcast on local TV, referring to the president.

“There are still a lot of unattended villages here.”

The town’s administra­tive head, Kasman Lassa, all but gave residents permission to take food — but nothing else — from stores.

“Everyone is hungry and they want to eat after several days of not eating,” Lassa said on local TV.

“We have anticipate­d it by providing food, rice, but it was not enough. There are many people here. So, on this issue, we cannot pressure them to hold much longer.”

Nearly 62,000 people have been displaced from their homes, Nugroho said.

Most of the attention has been focused so far on Palu, which has 380,000 people and is easier to reach than other hard-hit areas.

More aid was being distribute­d, but “we still need more time to take care of all the problems,” Nugroho said.

Teams continued searching for survivors under destroyed homes and buildings, including a collapsed eight-story hotel in Palu, but they needed more heavy equipment to clear the rubble.

Many people were believed trapped under shattered houses in the Palu neighbourh­ood of Balaroa, where the earthquake caused the ground to heave up and down violently.

“I and about 50 other people in Balaroa were able to save ourselves by riding on a mound of soil which was getting higher and higher,” resident Siti Hajat told MetroTV, adding that her house was destroyed.

A handful of disaster personnel arrived in the neighbourh­ood Tuesday morning.

A lone backhoe cleared a path into the jumble of twisted buildings.

Sa’Adon Lawira, who lost a grandchild, was angry that rescue efforts focused so quickly on places such as the Palu hotel where tourists were staying.

“Why did the search-and-rescue agency and others prioritize the search for victims in hotels?” he said, holding back tears as he spoke. “Neighbourh­oods like this should take precedence because the bodies of residents are buried, but there are no rescuers who have searched for them.”

Near the coast, the tsunami shattered buildings, uprooted concrete and thrust boats inland. The deadly wave reportedly reached as high as 6 metres (nearly 20 feet) in places.

 ?? Associated Press photo ?? A ship rests on land after it was swept ashore during Friday’s tsunami at a neighbourh­ood in Donggala, Central Sulawesi, Indonesia, Tuesday. A magnitude 7.5 earthquake struck at dusk on Friday, generating the tsunami said to have been as high as six metres (20 feet) in places.
Associated Press photo A ship rests on land after it was swept ashore during Friday’s tsunami at a neighbourh­ood in Donggala, Central Sulawesi, Indonesia, Tuesday. A magnitude 7.5 earthquake struck at dusk on Friday, generating the tsunami said to have been as high as six metres (20 feet) in places.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada