The Star Malaysia

Heavy rain lashes rescuers

Teams struggle to reach villages hit by tsunami

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SUMUR: Indonesian rescue teams struggled to reach remote areas on the western coast of Java amid an “extreme weather” rain warning after a tsunami killed more than 400 people last week.

Heavy rain lashed fishing villages along the coast, muddying roads and holding up convoys delivering heavy machinery and aid to isolated areas while authoritie­s urged residents to stay away from the shore in case of further waves.

Clouds of ash spewed from the nearby Anak Krakatau, or child of Krakatoa, almost obscuring the volcanic island where a crater collapse at high tide on Saturday sent waves up to 5m high smashing into the coast on the Sunda Strait, between Java and Sumatra islands.

Indonesia’s meteorolog­y agency (BMKG) said the rough weather could make the volcano’s crater more fragile.

“We have developed a monitoring system focused specifical­ly on the volcanic tremors at Anak Krakatau so that we can issue early warnings,” said BMKG head Dwikorita Karnawati, adding that a two-kilometre exclusion zone had been imposed.

The confirmed death toll is 430, with at least 159 people missing. Nearly 1,500 people were injured and over 21,000 people have evacuated to higher ground.

A state of emergency has been declared until Jan 4, which authoritie­s hope will make it easier to deploy assistance, said Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, spokesman for the national disaster mitigation agency.

Search and rescue teams were focused on the town of Sumur near the south-west tip of Java, but “the roads are damaged and clogged” and helicopter­s had to be deployed to carry out assessment­s and evacuation­s, he added.

Volunteers were having to piece together makeshift bridges out of concrete blocks after the waves washed away infrastruc­ture along the coast.

Indonesia is a vast archipelag­o that sits on the Pacific “Ring of Fire”. This year, the country has suffered its worst annual death toll from disasters in more than a decade.

The latest disaster, coming during the Christmas season, evoked memories of the Indian Ocean tsunami triggered by an earthquake on Dec 26, 2004, which killed 226,000 people in 14 countries, including more than 120,000 in Indonesia.

The Saturday evening tsunami followed the collapse of an area of the volcano island of about 64ha, or about 90 soccer pitches.

The waves engulfed fishing villages and holiday resorts, leaving a coast littered with the matchwood of homes, crushed vehicles and fallen trees.

Children’s toys and rides at a seaside carnival in Sumur were left scattered along a swampy beach.

 ?? — Reuters — Reuters/AP ?? Flattened: A man watching as rescuers search through the debris of his home after the tsunami in Sumur. Life goes on: A woman (left) hugs her daughter at a hospital in Kalianda, South Lampung, while people attend a Christmas service at Rahmat Pentecosta­l Church in Carita.
— Reuters — Reuters/AP Flattened: A man watching as rescuers search through the debris of his home after the tsunami in Sumur. Life goes on: A woman (left) hugs her daughter at a hospital in Kalianda, South Lampung, while people attend a Christmas service at Rahmat Pentecosta­l Church in Carita.

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