San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

INDONESIA QUAKE KILLS 8 IN JAVA, JOLTS BALI; NO TSUNAMI

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

A strong earthquake killed at least eight people, injured 23 others and damaged more than 300 buildings on Indonesia’s main island of Java and was also felt on the tourist hot spot of Bali, officials said Saturday. No tsunami warnings were posted.

The U.S. Geological Survey said the magnitude 6.0 quake struck off the island’s southern coast at 2 p.m. local time. It was centered 28 miles south of Sumberpucu­ng town of Malang District in East Java province, at a depth of 51 miles.

Rahmat Triyono, the head of Indonesia’s earthquake and tsunami center, said in a statement the undersea temblor did not have the potential to cause a tsunami. Still, he urged people to stay away from slopes of soil or rocks that have the potential for landslides.

This was the second deadly disaster to hit Indonesia in a week, after Tropical Cyclone Seroja caused a severe downpour Sunday that killed at least 174 people and left 48 still missing. Some victims were buried in either mudslides or solidified lava from a volcanic eruption in November, while others were swept away by flash flooding. Thousands of homes were damaged.

Saturday’s quake caused falling rocks that killed a woman on a motorcycle and badly injured her husband in East Java’s Lumajang district, said Raditya Jati, spokespers­on for the National Disaster Mitigation Agency.

He said dozens of homes were damaged across the district, and rescuers had retrieved two bodies from under the rubble in Kali Uling village. Two people were also confirmed killed in an area bordering Lumajang and Malang districts, while one person found dead under rubble in Malang.

Television reports showed people running in panic from malls and buildings in several cities in East Java province.

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