Albuquerque Journal

Indonesian Christians flock to churches after disasters

Survivors seek solace in prayer

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

PALU, Indonesia — Christians dressed in their tidiest clothes flocked to Sunday sermons in the earthquake and tsunami damaged Indonesian city of Palu, seeking answers as the death toll from the twin disasters breached 1,700 and officials said they feared more than 5,000 others could be missing.

Indonesia’s disaster agency said the number of dead had climbed to 1,763, mostly in Palu, but many more remained buried in several areas obliterate­d when the Sept. 28 quake caused loose soil to liquefy, sucking houses into deep mud and burying occupants.

Agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said more than 3,000 homes disappeare­d in the Palu neighborho­ods of Petobo and Balaroa, which were hit by liquefacti­on. Reports from village chiefs in those two areas showed that some 5,000 residents are missing, Nugroho said.

“We have to verify the data because some of the houses may be empty or people may have been evacuated to other areas,” he said at a news briefing in Jakarta, Indonesia’s capital. More than 8,000 either injured or vulnerable residents have been flown or shipped out of Palu, while others could have left by land, he said.

Officially, Nugroho said 265 people are confirmed missing and 152 others still buried under mud and rubble, nine days after the magnitude 7.5 earthquake and powerful tsunami hit Palu and surroundin­g areas.

In Palu, at least 200 people, including soldiers, filled the gray pews of the Protestant Manunggal church for the second of three services planned for Sunday.

Outside the church, Malonda said the intensity of the disaster had taken even scientists by surprise and called it the will of God. Two people from his congregati­on were missing, he said.

Malonda said religious leaders are discussing holding inter-faith prayers but nothing has been agreed yet.

Protestant­s, Catholics and Charismati­cs make up about 10 percent of the population of Palu, the provincial capital of Central Sulawesi, which has a history of violent conflict between Muslims and Christians, though tensions have calmed in the past decade. Indonesia is the world’s most populous Muslim country.

As searchers continued to dig through rubble Sunday, Central Sulawesi Gov. Loki Djanggola said local officials were meeting religious groups and families of victims to seek their consent to turn neighborho­ods wiped out by liquefacti­on into mass graves.

Officials have said that it is not safe for heavy equipment to operate in those areas and that they fear the risk of the spread of disease from decomposed bodies. Disaster agency spokesman Nugroho said the government targets to cease search operations in four days.

While grappling with immediate relief needs, the government is also mapping out plans to help more than 70,000 people, including tens of thousands of children, who have been displaced by the disasters to rebuild their lives.

Social welfare officials have set up nurseries in makeshift tents as a stopgap to keep children safe and help them heal from the trauma.

Market vendors have resumed business and roadside restaurant­s were open in Palu, but long lines of cars and motorcycle­s still snarled out of gas stations.

In Jakarta, volunteers walked around thoroughfa­res empty of cars collecting donations for earthquake victims during the weekly car-free morning in the city center.

 ?? DITA ALANGKARA/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A woman stands on the rubble of houses at the Petobo neighborho­od of Palu, Indonesia, on Sunday. The area was wiped out by an earthquake and tsunami.
DITA ALANGKARA/ASSOCIATED PRESS A woman stands on the rubble of houses at the Petobo neighborho­od of Palu, Indonesia, on Sunday. The area was wiped out by an earthquake and tsunami.

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