Fiji Sun

Disease Fears as More Bodies Found in Indonesia Disaster

-

More bodies were unearthed from the earthquake-and-tsunamirav­aged Indonesian city of Palu on Saturday, as authoritie­s move closer to calling off the search for the dead trapped under flattened communitie­s and declaring them mass graves.

Officials said the death toll had climbed to 1649, with more than a thousand feared still missing in the seaside city on Sulawesi island.

More than 82,000 military and civilian personnel, as well as volunteers, have descended on the devastated city, where relief groups say clean water and medical supplies are in short supply.

After days of delays, internatio­nal aid has slowly begun trickling into the disaster zone where the UN says almost 200,000 people need humanitari­an assistance.

But hopes of finding anyone alive a full eight days later have all but faded, as the search for survivors morphs into a grim gathering of the dead.

At the massive Balaroa government housing complex, where the sheer force of the quake turned the earth temporaril­y to mush, soldiers wearing masks to ward off the stench of death clambered over the giant mounds of mud, brick and cement.

Health scare

Vast numbers of decomposin­g bodies could still be buried beneath this once-thriving neighbourh­ood, the search and rescue agency said. Two soldiers who are part of the search emerged from a ditch with a body bag sagging in the middle but looking too light to be a corpse -they said they had found the heads of two adults and one child. “There are no survivors here. We just find bodies, every day,” said army sergeant Syafaruddi­n.

At the flattened Hotel Roa-Roa -- where early optimism that survivors might be found faded as the days wore on -- rescuers reviewed CCTV footage to get a sense of where the doomed guests could be buried.

In Petobo -- another village all but wiped off the map -- teams struggled to extract bodies from the muck, often dislodging limbs loosened by decomposit­ion after more than a week exposed to the elements.

The search for survivors has not officially been called off. But security minister Wiranto said the government had been discussing with local leaders and religious figures as to when the worst-hit areas would be declared mass graves, and left untouched. “We have to make a decision as to when the search for the dead will end. Then, we later must decide when the area will be designated a mass grave,” he told reporters. Concerns are growing that decomposin­g bodies could turn into a serious health hazard. While the World Health Organizati­on says there is no evidence to suggest bodies in such disaster situations could spark an epidemic, it has warned that those handling corpses are at a risk of contractin­g diseases like tuberculos­is, cholera, and bloodborne viruses.

 ?? Photos: EPA ?? Indonesian marines carry a bodybag in Balaroa, Palu. One official said there could 2000 people dead in the village. INSET: A woman cries as she attends a mass prayer for Palu at Talise beach a week on from the earthquake and tsunami.
Photos: EPA Indonesian marines carry a bodybag in Balaroa, Palu. One official said there could 2000 people dead in the village. INSET: A woman cries as she attends a mass prayer for Palu at Talise beach a week on from the earthquake and tsunami.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Fiji