Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Indonesia tsunami toll crosses 800, expected to jump further

- Bloomberg letters@hindustant­imes.com

BRACING FOR THE WORST Sulawesi regional govt declares state of emergency to improve rescue efforts

The death toll from a 7.5 magnitude earthquake and tsunami that hit Indonesia’s island of Sulawesi climbed to more than 800, with casualties expected to reach into the thousands as authoritie­s try to reach those trapped under collapsed buildings.

Local media reports quoted vice president Muhammad Jusuf Kalla as saying that he expected the toll to grow as he drew comparison­s between the latest quake and a tsunami that hit Indonesia’s Aceh province in 2004.

About 832 people are confirmed dead and foreigners from Asia and Europe are among those reported missing, Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, a spokesman at National Disaster Mitigation Agency, said in a televised press conference on Sunday.

The central Sulawesi government has declared a state of emergency for 14 days to improve rescue efforts, Nugroho said. At least 209 aftershock­s hit the island as of Sunday afternoon.

Many of the dead were found at beaches near the city of Palu, population 300,000, where a festival was being held. Many people on the beach were killed as they weren’t aware of the threat of a tsunami because there is no siren to warn them, Nugroho wrote on his Twitter account.

Citizens from France, South Korea and Malaysia are still missing, while foreigners who have been or will be evacuated from the quake-hit areas include those from China, Germany, Singapore, Belgium, Vietnam and Thailand, Nugroho said.

A tsunami of as high as three metres hit the coast on Friday after a massive quake that damaged thousands of buildings in Palu and caused a major power failure and cut communicat­ion, Nugroho said. Informatio­n from the town of Donggala, population 270,000, and two others is limited because of communicat­ion problems.

PT Garuda Indonesia cancelled at least 18 flights to and from Palu until October 2, the state carrier said in emailed statement on Saturday. The airport has been partially opened for commercial flights on Sunday even as the priority is for emergency and rescue efforts, according to Indonesia’s air navigation provider.

More than 400 people were treated at hospitals for injuries. More than 14,000 people were displaced from their homes and are being housed in emergency tents, Nugroho said. There were also reports of the quake impacting towns outside of Palu and Donggala, which could signal more victims from the disaster, he said.

JAKARTA:

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