East Bay Times

Death toll from earthquake rises

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The death toll from Monday's catastroph­ic earthquake in Indonesia's most populous province has risen to 310, officials said Friday, after days of rescue efforts that had been impeded by heavy rains, landslide-blocked roads, downed communicat­ion lines and powerful aftershock­s. Twenty-four people remained missing as search efforts continued.

Officials had put the number of deaths from the shallow magnitude 5.6 quake — which rattled a mountainou­s area and caused damage across a wide area of disparate villages separated by rugged, hilly roads — at 272 as of Thursday afternoon.

Some local officials had said earlier figures given by the central government were an undercount, in part because some families had buried their dead soon after the quake, before responders reached their villages. Officials said they were working on cross-checking the data by gathering death certificat­es or recording the identities of victims from the cemeteries of all affected villages.

The earthquake in Cianjur, an agricultur­al region in West Java province famed for its rice, destroyed tens of thousands of homes and set off massive landslides that swallowed whole communitie­s. About a third of those killed were children who had been trapped in houses or schools that crumbled, in a rural area with lax building standards, officials said in the days after the quake.

The number of the dead and injured, as well as tens of thousands forced from their homes, was high even for Indonesia, where earthquake­s and other natural disasters are virtually a daily occurrence. Officials said the sloping terrain and unstable soil contribute­d to the extent of the damage.

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