The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Grim search for bodies called off in Palu

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PALU, Indonesia: Indonesia yesterday called off the grim search for those killed in the quake-tsunami, with no hope of retrieving around 5,000 bodies believed to be still buried under the ruins nearly two weeks after the disaster.

The magnitude 7.5-quake and a subsequent tsunami razed swathes of the city of Palu on Sulawesi island on Sept 28.

A total 2,065 bodies had been recovered since the twin disaster, the disaster agency said yesterday.

But authoritie­s fear 5,000 more could be buried beneath the ruined city, where entire villages were swallowed.

Rescuers had struggled to find remains in the twisted wreckage, a job made worse as mud hardened and bodies decomposed in the tropical heat.

“The search and rescue (SAR) operation for the victims will end this Thursday afternoon,” SAR field director in Palu, Bambang Suryo, told AFP.

“Considerin­g the difficulty on the ground, we really need to consider the health and safety of our rescue personnel.”

Teams would, however, remain on standby in Palu until Oct 26, when a state of emergency is expected to be lifted.

The government earlier indicated that hard-hit areas would be left untouched as mass graves.

Parks and monuments are planned at three of these worst-hit areas — Balaroa, Petobo and Jono Oge — to commemorat­e the possibly thousands of dead who will never be found.

Those zones were all but destroyed by liquefacti­on, a phenomenon where the brute force of a quake turns soil to quicksand.

More than 200,000 people remain in dire need of humanitari­an assistance in Palu, with clean drinking water and medical supplies still in short supply.

The United Nations has sought $50.5 million for immediate relief to help the victims. Planeloads of donations have flown into Palu from the United States, Australia, the European Union and the Philippine­s, among many others.

Nearly 80,000 people were displaced by the disaster, many sheltering in tents outside their destroyed homes.

United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres will tour the disaster zone with Indonesian vice-president Jusuf Kalla today. Central Sulawesi governor Longki Djanggola said the survivors would be supported in their time of need.

“I am sure Central Sulawesi will rise again,” he said in a statement.

Humanitari­an efforts have accelerate­d into the disaster-ravaged city, but the recovery effort was criticised for moving too slowly. Looters ransacked shops in the immediate aftermath of the disaster, as food and water ran dry and convoys bringing life-saving relief were slow to arrive.

Getting vital supplies to the affected areas proved hugely challengin­g as flights into Palu were limited by its small airport, leaving aid workers facing gruelling overland journeys.

Indonesia initially refused internatio­nal help, saying the military had the situation in hand.

Four days after the disaster, once the picture became clearer, President Joko Widodo reluctantl­y agreed to allow in overseas aid.

But earlier this week foreign aid workers were told to withdraw their personnel, frustratin­g some groups keen to help out on the ground.

Some foreign rescue teams were unable to access the disaster zone and deploy quickly to help search for the dead and missing.

“We just came here because the government of Indonesia asked for assistance,” said Marcus Butler from South African charity Gift of the Givers, which was denied permission to help with the search.

“They say there is no need for aid in Indonesia. But look at all these people,” he told AFP.

Indonesia sits along the world’s most tectonical­ly active region, and its 260 million people are vulnerable to earthquake­s, tsunamis and volcanic eruptions. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Search teams look for victims in Balaroa neighbourh­ood in Palu, Central Sulawesi, Indonesia. — Reuters photos
Search teams look for victims in Balaroa neighbourh­ood in Palu, Central Sulawesi, Indonesia. — Reuters photos
 ??  ?? Red Cross members travel through thick mud and debris during an evacuation operation in Petobo.
Red Cross members travel through thick mud and debris during an evacuation operation in Petobo.
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