The Star Malaysia

Children return to schools to clean up and find friends

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PALU: Children in the Indonesian city of Palu began returning to school to tidy up their classrooms and to help gather data on how many of them will be coming back 10 days after a major earthquake and tsunami hit their city.

The 7.5 magnitude quake on Sept 28 brought down many buildings in the small city on Sulawesi island, 1,500km northeast of Jakarta, while tsunami waves smashed into its beachfront.

But the biggest killer was probably soil liquefacti­on, which happens when a powerful quake turns the ground into a liquid mire and which obliterate­d several Palu neighbourh­oods.

At one state high school, teenagers dressed in grey and white uniforms swept up broken glass in the classrooms. Trophies had fallen from a broken school showcase and the basketball court was cracked.

“It’s sad to see our school like this,” said Dewi Rahmawati, 17, who expects to graduate next year and wants to study economics in a local university.

The students found out that they had to turn up to school through messages on Facebook and WhatsApp.

School principal Kasiludin said authoritie­s told all teachers to show up for work from yesterday to collect informatio­n on student numbers.

“We won’t force the students to come back because many are traumatise­d. But we must start again soon to keep their spirits up and so they don’t fall behind,” he said.

The school had lost at least seven students and one teacher, he said.

At the SMP Negeri 15 Palu middle school, fewer than 50 of its 697 students showed up.

School principal Abdul Rashid said he was aware of four students killed in the quake

“Classes haven’t started. We’re only collecting data to find out how many students are safe,” he said.

“I’m still waiting for the Ministry of Education to give us instructio­ns on when to begin classes. For now, I don’t think we’re ready. Many children are traumatise­d and frightened.”

One boy chatting in the school compound with friends said he was disappoint­ed that so few of his class mates had shown up.

“I haven’t heard from so many of them. I want to think positively; I hope they are OK,” said Muhamad Islam Bintang Lima, dressed in the school uniform of white shirt and navy blue trousers.

Most of the dead from the quake and tsunami were in Palu, the region’s main urban centre. Figures for more remote areas are trickling in but they seem to have suffered fewer deaths than the city. Sulawesi is one of Indonesia’s five main islands. The archipelag­o sees frequent earthquake­s and occasional tsunamis.

In 2004, a quake off Sumatra island triggered a tsunami across the Indian Ocean that killed 226,000 people in 13 countries, including more than 120,000 in Indonesia.

Indonesia is hosting an Internatio­nal Monetary Fund/ World Bank meeting on the resort island of Bali this week, which has drawn some criticism from the political opposition.

“What is the benefit for us Indonesian people, especially in this time of catastroph­e,” Fadli Zon, deputy speaker of parliament from the opposition nationalis­t Gerindra party, said on Twitter, taking issue with government spending on the meeting.

We won’t force the students to come back because many are traumatise­d. But we must start again soon. Kasiludin

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