Gulf News

Terrified trekkers head down Mt Rinjani

Hundreds still on volcano slopes after the quake in Indonesia

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Nearly 700 trekkers headed down Mount Rinjani on Indonesia’s tourist island of Lombok yesterday, a day after a powerful earthquake of magnitude 6.4 terrified the climbers as boulders tumbled down the slopes of the volcano.

Officials said the death toll from Sunday’s earthquake, which was centred on the northern part of Lombok, but was also felt on the resort island of Bali to the west, stood at 16. More than 335 people were injured, many by collapsing buildings.

“I thought I was going to die,” said John Robyn Buenavista, a 23-year-old American, who was at the summit when the quake hit. “I was clinging to the ground. It felt like it lasted forever. I saw people fall off, but it’s a blur.” The national park authority said yesterday that a key route to the peak of the 3,726-metre volcano had been cleared, and a helicopter was dropping supplies to others still picking their way to safety.

An estimated 689 people were still on Rinjani, said Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, a spokesman of the national disaster mitigation agency.

“Hundreds of trekkers in the crater in climbing areas couldn’t come down when they wanted to, because the paths were covered by debris from landslides and there were fears of subsequent landslides,” Sutopo told a news conference.

As many as 820 people — most of them foreigners — were on Mount Rinjani when the quake struck, making two trails impassable, Sutopo said on Twitter late on Sunday.

 ?? AFP ?? Hikers descending from Mount Rinjani arrive at a post in Sembalun, West Nusa Tenggara, yesterday.
AFP Hikers descending from Mount Rinjani arrive at a post in Sembalun, West Nusa Tenggara, yesterday.

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