Bangkok Post

Over 1,000 likely still missing after quake

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PALU: More than a thousand people could still be missing after Indonesia’s devastatin­g quake-tsunami, officials said yesterday, drasticall­y upping the total number of people unaccounte­d for a week after the disaster.

Palu city on Sulawesi island has been left in ruins after it was hit by a powerful quake and a wall of water which flattened houses and flipped over cars, with the confirmed death toll now standing at 1,558.

Fears are growing that vast numbers of people have been buried in a massive government housing complex at Balaroa, where the sheer force of the quake turned the earth temporaril­y to mush.

“We estimate there were over one thousand houses buried, so maybe more than 1,000 people are still missing,” Yusuf Latif, a spokesman for Indonesia’s search and rescue agency, said.

“But we still cannot be sure because there’s a possibilit­y that some people managed to get out.”

After days of delays, internatio­nal aid has finally started to arrive in the disaster zone, where the UN says almost 200,000 people are in need of humanitari­an assistance.

Survivors have ransacked shops and supply trucks in the hunt for basic necessitie­s, prompting security forces to round up dozens of suspected looters and warn that they will open fire on thieves.

Authoritie­s previously set a tentative deadline of yesterday for finding anyone trapped under ruined buildings, although chances of pulling survivors alive from the rubble at such a late stage are almost zero.

Images of the area showed a vast jumble of flattened houses next to a badly fractured road.

At the heavily damaged Mercure hotel on Palu’s waterfront, there was growing frustratio­n in a French and Indonesian search team.

The rescuers, using sniffer dogs and scanners, had detected what they believed was a person under mounds of rubble the previous evening but when they resumed the hunt early yesterday, all signs of life had disappeare­d.

 ??  ?? A boy adjusts his sarong yesterday as others sit before offering prayers at a makeshift tent outside the damaged Agung Darussalam mosque in Palu, in Indonesia’s Central Sulawesi.
A boy adjusts his sarong yesterday as others sit before offering prayers at a makeshift tent outside the damaged Agung Darussalam mosque in Palu, in Indonesia’s Central Sulawesi.

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