The Hamilton Spectator

Thousands in fear after 2nd quake in a week

Homeless huddle in makeshift tents on tourist island Lombok

- ANDI JATMIKO AND STEPHEN WRIGHT

SENGGIGI, INDONESIA — Thousands left homeless by a powerful quake that ruptured roads and flattened buildings on the Indonesian tourist island of Lombok sheltered Monday night in makeshift tents.

Meanwhile, authoritie­s said rescuers hadn’t yet reached all devastated areas and expect the toll of 98 dead to climb.

It was the second deadly quake in a week to hit Lombok, a lessdevelo­ped island compared with its more famous neighbour Bali, where the strong tremors caused panic and damaged buildings.

A July 29 quake killed 16 people and damaged hundreds of houses on Lombok, some of which collapsed in Sunday evening’s quake, measured at magnitude 7.0 by Indonesian authoritie­s and 6.9 by the U.S. Geological Survey.

Damage was “massive” in mountainou­s northern Lombok, where the quake was centred, said National Disaster Mitigation Agency spokespers­on Sutopo Purwo Nugroho.

In several districts, more than half the homes were destroyed or severely damaged.

A large mosque collapsed on worshipper­s in northern Lombok’s

Lading-Lading village, and rescuers used a backhoe to search the debris. The number of victims was unknown.

Some areas still hadn’t been reached 24 hours after the quake because of collapsed bridges, blocked and ruptured roads and the loss of power and communicat­ions.

Nugroho said the death toll had risen to 98 and warned it will continue to increase. All but two of were killed on Lombok; the others died on Bali.

More than 230 people were seriously injured. Thousands of homes and buildings were damaged and those displaced camped wherever they could — in sports fields and on roadsides, cobbling together ramshackle shelters and building campfires for warmth.

Sahril, who uses one name, said he escaped his collapsing house in North Lombok with his immediate family, but his older brother is buried in his flattened home in the village of Cubek.

“He was serving customers when the earthquake happened. The customers managed to escape, but he himself didn’t,” Sahril said.

“His two-story house collapsed and buried him. He had no chance to scream (for) help.”

The quake struck at a shallow depth of 10.5 kilometres. . Shallow quakes tend to cause more damage than deeper ones.

“We were sitting there having dinner at about seven o’clock last night, we just felt a really big sort of shaking and the lights went off and everyone just ran,” Australian tourist Kim Liebelt said as he waited with other travellers for a flight out at Lombok’s internatio­nal airport.

“And then the roof started falling down on us, rocks and rubble and then just everyone running to get away,” he said.

Videos showed screaming people running in panic from a shopping mall and a neighbourh­ood in Bali where parked vehicles swayed.

On Lombok, soldiers and other rescuers carried the injured on stretchers and carpets. Many were treated outdoors because hospitals were damaged.

“People panicked and scattered on the streets, and buildings and houses that had been damaged by the previous earthquake had become more damaged and collapsed,” Nugroho said.

The quake triggered a tsunami warning, and frightened people rushed from their homes to higher ground, particular­ly in North Lombok and Mataram, the capital of West Nusa Tenggara province.

The warning was lifted after only small waves were recorded.

Australian Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton, in Lombok for a regional security meeting, said he and his delegation were dining in their hotel’s 12th-floor restaurant when the quake struck, plunging the building into darkness and throwing people to the floor.

“Mate, we were knocked certainly to the floor. It was the violence of the shaking of the building — was pretty dramatic,” he said in a radio interview.

“Everyone’s a bit shaken, but all well. But people out in the villages or elsewhere haven’t been so lucky, unfortunat­ely.”

 ?? FAUZY CHANIAGO THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A man inspects a village destroyed by a strong earthquake in Kayangan, Lombok Island, Indonesia, Monday.
FAUZY CHANIAGO THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A man inspects a village destroyed by a strong earthquake in Kayangan, Lombok Island, Indonesia, Monday.

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