National Post (National Edition)

Survivors jittery after deadly tsunami hits Indonesia.

- Niniek karmini

SUMUR, INDONESIA • Panicked residents, police and soldiers in this remote fishing village clobbered by a devastatin­g weekend tsunami ran to higher ground Tuesday, shouting “Water is coming! Water is coming!” and reciting verses from the Qur’an as emergency messages were broadcast over mosque speakers.

It proved to be a false alarm, but a similar frenzy broke out in Tanjung Lesung, another tsunami-stricken area located hours away, as unsettled survivors of the disaster remained traumatize­d by a tragedy that killed more than 420 people and left thousands homeless.

Meanwhile, Christmas celebratio­ns were replaced by sombre prayers as church leaders called on Christians across Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim nation, to pray for tsunami victims.

Unlike other tsunamis that have hit disaster-prone Indonesia following large earthquake­s, Saturday’s big waves blasted ashore at night without warning. The eruption of Anak Krakatoa, or Child of Krakatoa, a volcano in the Sunda Strait, is believed to have created a landslide on the volcano’s slope, displacing a large volume of water that slammed into the islands of Java and Sumatra.

People in Sumur village, which has been slow to receive aid due to roads being cut off, remained stunned by how quickly the tsunami hit. The beach, located just a few kilometres from the tourist island of Umang near Java’s western tip, is popular for snorkellin­g and other water activities. The tsunami decimated the area, ripping houses from their foundation­s and bulldozing concrete buildings.

Scientists have said the tsunami’s waves were recorded in several places at about one metre high, but residents of Sumur insisted they towered more than three metres there. They said a soaring white wall of water roared toward them at high speeds, ripping trees out of the ground by their roots.

“There was no sign of a tsunami when we were at the beach. The sea didn’t recede,” said Tati Hayati, a housewife, who was enjoying a pleasant evening with 10 other people when the disaster hit.

When she spotted high, fast-moving waves launching toward the shore, she ran to her car and managed to get inside. But she couldn’t outrun it. She said the car was struck by three waves, breaking out the back window and filling the vehicle with gushing water.

“We thought we would all die,” Hayati said. “We almost could not breathe and I almost gave up when I groped the key in the water and managed to open the door, and the water began to recede. We got out of the car and ran to safety.”

The disaster was compounded because it occurred over a busy holiday weekend before Christmas when many people had fled crowded cities to relax at popular beach areas.

 ?? ADEK BERRY / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? People evacuate to higher ground following rumours of a new tsunami in Sumur, Indonesia, on Christmas Day. Aid workers warned water and medicine supplies were dwindling as thousands crammed makeshift evacuation centres.
ADEK BERRY / AFP / GETTY IMAGES People evacuate to higher ground following rumours of a new tsunami in Sumur, Indonesia, on Christmas Day. Aid workers warned water and medicine supplies were dwindling as thousands crammed makeshift evacuation centres.

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