The Borneo Post

Indonesian­s flee to higher ground in tsunami drill

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This drill will give us a valuable insight ... into how we can improve our disaster readiness system. Rahmat Triyono, head of BMKG’s earthquake and tsunami division

MEULABOH, Indonesia: Indonesian high school students fled to higher ground as tsunami warning sirens blared yesterday, launching an evacuation exercise across a region devastated by a 2004 disaster which killed over 200,000 people.

The drill simulated a magnitude 9.3 earthquake off the west coast of Indonesia’s Sumatra island. A total of 24 countries bordering the Indian Ocean, from Australia to Yemen, are taking part in the biennial disaster-preparedne­ss exercise.

The UN- organised drill saw some 125 students in Meulaboh — a coastal town in Aceh province hammered by the 2004 disaster — hide under their desks when a mock quake struck before they ran to an open field once the shaking had stopped.

The group then fled to higher ground as tsunami sirens blared, with several other communitie­s across the country also taking part in Exercise Indian Ocean Wave 2018.

Indonesia is one of the most disaster-prone nations on earth.

The archipelag­o nation lies on the Pacific ‘ Ring of Fire’, where tectonic plates collide and many of the world’s volcanic eruptions and earthquake­s occur.

In December 2004, a tsunami triggered by a magnitude 9.3 earthquake off the coast of Sumatra killed 220,000 people in countries around the Indian Ocean, including 168,000 Indonesian­s mostly in Aceh.

Indonesia’s meteorolog­y, climatolog­y and geophysics agency ( BMKG) took part in the latest exercises, meant to give countries an opportunit­y to test their operating procedures, communicat­ions and evacuation preparedne­ss.

“This drill will give us a valuable insight ... into how we can improve our disaster readiness system,” Rahmat Triyono, head of BMKG’s earthquake and tsunami division, told a press briefing.

More than 60,000 people across the region took part in community evacuation­s during the last exercise in 2016, the UN said.

Sri Lanka — which lost 30,000 people to the 2004 disaster — was holding evacuation drills in three coastal districts Wednesday.

“Our target is to ensure that we complete the evacuation of the coastal areas within 10 minutes of sounding the alarm,” Disaster Management Minister Duminda Dissanayak­e said Tuesday.

“We want to bring down that time to about seven minutes.”

The drill got off to a false start, with the tsunami warning issued before the announceme­nt of an ‘earthquake’ in Indonesia.

The tsunami warning tower in the southern coastal district of Galle broadcast a correction. Minutes later it followed the prearrange­d sequence of first announcing the quake and then issuing the tsunami evacuation order.

Dozens of hotel employees and schoolchil­dren left premises in the Galle district and moved to designated higher ground, guided by disaster management officials.

Yesterday’s drill coincided with an anti-government rally in Colombo. Minister Dissanayak­e rejected allegation­s it was timed to sabotage the rally, saying the date had been set by the UN.

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 ?? — AFP photos ?? Indonesian schoolchil­dren stay under their desks as they participat­e in a tsunami drill in Meulaboh.
— AFP photos Indonesian schoolchil­dren stay under their desks as they participat­e in a tsunami drill in Meulaboh.
 ??  ?? Members of India’s State Disaster Response Force take part in a tsunami response training exercise in Chennai, India.
Members of India’s State Disaster Response Force take part in a tsunami response training exercise in Chennai, India.
 ??  ?? Hotel employees take part in a tsunami evacuation drill in Hikkaduwa, Sri Lanka.
Hotel employees take part in a tsunami evacuation drill in Hikkaduwa, Sri Lanka.

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