Toronto Star

Second deadly quake strikes Indonesia

Dozens of lives lost as powerful tremor hits tourist island of Lombok

- JOE COCHRANE

MATARAM, INDONESIA— A powerful earthquake struck the Indonesian tourist island of Lombok on Sunday, killing at least 82 people and shaking neighbouri­ng Bali, one week after another quake on Lombok killed more than a dozen.

The latest quake, which triggered a brief tsunami warning, damaged buildings as far away as Denpasar on Bali, including a department store and the airport terminal, where ceiling panels were shaken loose, authoritie­s said.

Video showed screaming people running in panic from houses in a Bali neighbourh­ood and vehicles rocking. On Lombok, soldiers and other rescuers carried injured people on stretchers and carpets to an evacuation centre. Muhammad Rum, head of the disaster management agency in West Nusa Tenggara province, which includes Lombok, told Indonesian TV the death toll had risen to 82.

The quake, recorded at magni- tude 7.0 by the U.S. Geological Survey, struck early Sunday evening at a depth of 10.5 kilometres in the northern part of Lombok.

“I was watching TV when I felt a big shake,” said Harian, a Lombok woman who uses one name.

“The lamp was shaking and people were shouting ‘Get out.’ I ran out into the dark because the power cut off.”

A tsunami warning was lifted after waves just 15 centimetre­s high were recorded in three villages, said the head of Indonesia’s Meteorolog­y, Climatolog­y and Geophysics Agency, Dwi- korita Karnawati.

National Disaster Mitigation Agency spokespers­on Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said the quake was felt strongly across Lombok and Bali and had damaged houses on both islands.

Iwan Asmara, a Lombok disaster official, said frightened people poured out of their homes to move to higher ground, particular­ly in North Lombok and Mataram, the capital of West Nusa Tenggara province.

The Bali and Lombok airports continued operating Sunday night, according to the director general of civil aviation. There had been a half-hour evacuation at the Lombok airport following the quake because the electricit­y went off. TV showed crying women consoling each other outside Lombok’s airport.

The island was already reeling from a magnitude 6.4 quake on July 29, which killed 16 people.

Indonesia is prone to earthquake­s due to its location on the Pacific “Ring of Fire,” an arc of volcanoes and fault lines in the Pacific Basin. In December 2004, a massive magnitude 9.1 earthquake off Sumatra island triggered a tsunami that killed 230,000 people in a dozen countries.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada