Toronto Star

Tsunami leaves path of destructio­n in Indonesia

Three-metre-high wall of water slammed into Palu and two other cities

- MARGIE MASON

JAKARTA, INDONESIA— The sun had just slipped behind the mountains, leaving a soft pink glow as the blue sea melted into the darkening horizon. It could have been a video postcard from a tropical paradise, except for the long white wave stretching the width of the bay — getting larger and closer with each passing second.

By the time the fast-moving wall of frothing water slammed into the city of Palu off Indonesia’s Sulawesi island on Friday, it was 3 metres (10 feet) high.

The tsunami, triggered by a magnitude 7.5 earthquake, de- stroyed the idyllic scene in seconds, leaving hundreds dead. The video clip, shot on a smartphone and widely broadcast Saturday on Indonesian TV, showed water swallowing an entire row of buildings and gushing into streets and a damaged mosque as onlookers ran in terror. Photos showed twisted tin and wood splinters floating in the coffee-colored torrent alongside cars and motorbikes that had been tossed like toys. A shopping mall was reduced to rubble.

Images also showed bodies draped in crude blue tarps on roads near the beach, while others were laid out in rows on concrete foundation­s. One man carried a dead child through the debris.

Experts said the long, narrow bay running into Palu, a city of 380,000, squeezed the tsunami into a tight space, likely making the waves more dangerous. Officials said more than 380 were dead in Palu alone, and more were unaccounte­d for.

“Because of the bay, all the water comes there and collects together. And then it makes it higher,” said Nazli Ismail, a geophysici­st at the University of Syiah Kuala in Banda Aceh on Indonesia’s Sumatra island, where a magnitude 9.1 earthquake spawned a tsunami in 2004, killing 230,000 people in a dozen countries.

Disaster agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said the waves reached as high as 6 metres (20 feet) in at least one area, according to a report relayed by a man who called to say he survived only by climbing and clinging to a tree. The cities of Donggala and Mamuju were also hit, but they had not yet been reached. Roads were impassable, cut off by debris and landslides, and communicat­ions were nearly impossible.

“We need heavy equipment for this evacuation process,” Nugroho said. “We also need to double up our rescue team personnel.” Hospitals i n Palu were swamped with patients lying on the ground hooked to drips. One woman was about to give birth. They were being treated outdoors due to continuing strong aftershock­s, and many residents in the area were also sleeping outside, too afraid to return indoors. The city was eerily dark and quiet with no electricit­y and not even landline phones working.

A massive yellow suspension bridge crossing an estuary feeding into the bay was toppled — either by the earthquake or tsunami — and left lying on its side in the water.

Ismail said he was surprised that a tsunami was generated off the coast of central Sulawesi, which sits on a strike-slip fault, producing earthquake­s that typically move in a horizontal motion and do not usually displace large amounts of water.

In contrast, temblors occurring where one tectonic plate is lodged beneath another — called subduction zones — can move large amounts of water vertically when the strain forces one plate to pop up or dive down.

The force can create devastatin­g tsunamis like the one in Sumatra and off Japan’s northeast coast in 2011.

 ?? BAY ISMOYO AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Experts said the long, narrow bay running into Palu, a city of 380,000, squeezed the tsunami into a tight space, likely making the waves more dangerous.
BAY ISMOYO AFP/GETTY IMAGES Experts said the long, narrow bay running into Palu, a city of 380,000, squeezed the tsunami into a tight space, likely making the waves more dangerous.

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