The Star Malaysia

Lombok quakes ‘don’t meet national disaster status’

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JAKARTA: Indonesia’s disaster agency says earthquake­s that killed more than 500 people on the island of Lombok in the past month and caused half a billion dollars in damage don’t rise to the level of a national emergency.

The agency’s response to criticism, released on Monday evening, strikes a nationalis­tic tone, noting that declaring a national disaster opens the “door as wide as possible” to internatio­nal assistance that can cause new problems.

But it also said Indonesia has substantia­l experience in handling natural calamities and hasn’t declared a national disaster since the December 2004 tsunami that killed more than 100,000 people in Aceh province on Sumatra.

It said the tsunami was declared a national disaster because all levels of government in the province were devastated and overwhelme­d, requiring a central command.

Media articles and people on social media have criticised the relief response to the earthquake­s.

An Australian journalist’s tweet expressing astonishme­nt that a national disaster hadn’t been declared was retweeted nearly 5,000 times.

Some of the domestic criticism is politicall­y motivated as candidates for the presidenti­al election in April, including the incumbent Joko “Jokowi” Widodo, are beginning their campaigns.

Lombok, a less developed island next to the tourist hotspot of Bali, has been hit by a series of powerful quakes since late July.

The latest two on Sunday, a magnitude 6.3 quake in the morning and a 6.9 temblor in the evening, included aftershock­s above magnitude 5.0 and killed at least a dozen people.

The disaster agency said the quakes have claimed 506 lives, damaged more than 74,000 homes and displaced 431,000 people – about 13% of Lombok’s population.

Damage and losses are currently estimated at 7.7 trillion rupiah (RM2.16bil).

Disaster agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said the central government funds the relief effort regardless of whether a national disaster is declared or not.

He said a four trillion rupiah (RM1.12bil) disaster relief fund managed by the finance ministry and the disaster agency can be topped up by parliament.

Reconstruc­tion would be separately funded by the national government, he said.

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