Baltimore Sun

Indonesia deaths hit 800 in aftermath of disaster

- By Simon Roughneen and Shashank Bengali

JAKARTA, Indonesia — Anisah Firdaus Bandu’s mother called her in tears from her hometown of Palu on Friday evening when a magnitude 7.5 earthquake jolted the island of Sulawesi in eastern Indonesia.

Since then, with cellphone towers and other infrastruc­ture damaged by the quake and an ensuing tsunami, Anisah hasn’t heard from her parents, who are among thousands believed unaccounte­d for in the disaster that killed at least 800 people, officials said Sunday.

“My mother cried a lot; she tried to pick up my father at his office,” said Anisah, a civil servant in Jakarta, the capital.

As anxious relatives tried to place phone calls in vain and clamored to board military or relief flights to Palu, a town of about 380,000 people, emergency crews struggled to reach the worst affected areas, including a string of coastal towns that remained cut off by washedout roads and downed communicat­ion lines.

Indonesia’s national disaster agency said the official death toll had more than doubled overnight, to 832 people, but nearly all of those casualties were in Palu. Officials said the toll was likely to rise as relief workers reach major towns such as Donggala, with a population of about 300,000 that is normally a half-hour drive north of Palu.

“The death toll will increase but I cannot say (by) how much,” said Sutopo Nugroho, the disaster agency spokesman.

With “catastroph­ic damage” in many areas, relief agencies braced for a Rescuers evacuate an earthquake survivor in Palu, a town of about 380,000 people in Indonesia, on Sunday. large loss of life once teams could assess the effects in Donggala and other towns, said Tom Howells, program implementa­tion director for Save the Children’s Jakarta office.

“Aid agencies and local authoritie­s are struggling to reach several communitie­s around Donggala. We hold grave fears for many of the towns in this area,” Howells said.

Images shown on local TV and social media sites from Palu showed scenes of death and destructio­n: crumpled buildings and bridges surrounded by dead bodies, some covered in blankets, some with their clothes partly ripped off by the force of a tsunami that measured between five and 20 feet high.

Indonesian news media said dozens of people were trapped beneath toppled hotels and malls in Palu, an echo of scenes on the island of Lombok in August when a series of earthquake­s killed more than 460 people.

An Associated Press reporter in Palu said that rescue workers were focusing on an eight-story hotel where on Saturday voices were heard calling for help from under the rubble. Officials estimated about 50 people were inside the hotel, but the cries for help were no longer heard by Sunday afternoon, the AP reported.

With roads into Palu blocked by landslides and the town’s airport damaged, getting teams of relief workers from elsewhere in Indonesia to the disaster zone was proving difficult, delaying timely assistance to survivors and the arrival of heavy equipment that could save the people trapped inside downed buildings.

Officials said they would deliver some assistance via Makassar, the biggest city on Sulawesi, an island of about 18 million people. Makkasar is at the southern end of the island, a 12-hour drive from Palu.

Dozens of strong aftershock­s struck Palu, where many fearful residents were reluctant to re-enter their homes, said Rafiq Anshori, head of the Indonesian Red Cross’s disaster preparedne­ss division.

He spoke by phone from Palu, where some communicat­ions had been restored by Sunday evening.

“Many road(s), houses, other facilities are broken,” he said. “People are finding it difficult to get food, water, fuel.”

 ?? ARIMACS WILANDER/AP ??
ARIMACS WILANDER/AP

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