The Mercury News

SCOPE OF QUAKE HINDERS RESCUE

Workers fight terrain, other problems getting to area, where at least 268 are killed

- By Dera Menra Sijabat and Victoria Kim

Schoolhous­es were reduced to skeletal, warped frames, thousands of homes were uprooted from their foundation­s and an entire village was engulfed by a landslide in the wake of a devastatin­g earthquake in a mountainou­s region of Indonesia.

The scope of the destructio­n and aftershock­s of Monday's earthquake that killed at least 268 complicate­d the ongoing rescue effort in Indonesia's most populous province, as workers were hampered by blocked roads, power outages and stretched medical resources. Anxious family members awaited news of loved ones, some of whom were trapped in villages with weak phone and internet services. Hospitals were overrun, with the injured being treated outside in makeshift tents.

After being trapped by the fallen bricks of her home, Supartika, 47, was eventually rescued by her husband and neighbors. She was taken to the hospital hours later, around 8 p.m. Monday, because of the limited number of ambulances.

“I was shocked. It was very sudden,” said Supartika, who like many Indonesian­s goes by only one name. Her right hand was broken, right shoulder dislocated and leg cut by broken glass. “My house is flat to the earth.”

The full extent of the damage from Monday's shallow, magnitude 5.6 earthquake remained unclear with more than 1,000 injured and 150 still missing. Most of the dead had been crushed in collapsed buildings. Many were women and children in homes or schools that crumbled when the earthquake struck in the afternoon, Ridwan Kamil, governor of West Java province, said at a news conference.

Supartika was cooking lunch at home when suddenly she felt the earth beneath her convulse.

Her husband had offered to cook but she had insisted on doing it herself, so he went out to scatter fertilizer on their rice fields instead. In an instant, she found herself kneeling in the darkness of her crumpled home, her arms shielding her head from the crush of a wall that had collapsed around her.

“I fainted for a while,” she said. “When I got my senses back, I found myself still under the debris.”

Earthquake­s are a daily occurrence in Indonesia, which sits on the “Ring of Fire,” an arc of volcanoes and fault lines along the Pacific Basin. The landslides that follow can be catastroph­ic in a country where deforestat­ion for farmland and illegal small-scale gold mining operations have contribute­d to unstable soil conditions.

The sloping, hilly terrain of Cianjur Regency, an agricultur­al region that was the epicenter of the earthquake, made it especially vulnerable to landslides, said Ridwan, the governor. Damage to homes appeared worse in villages farther out of the city and deeper into the hills, where lowslung, shoddily built dwellings dot the landscape.

President Joko Widodo of Indonesia on Tuesday visited Cianjur, the city closest to the epicenter, pledging to provide aid to victims to rebuild and to improve constructi­on standards.

“It's important to have quakeproof buildings,” he said. “We're focusing first on opening road access in landslide-affected areas. I've instructed that evacuation and rescue of buried victims be prioritize­d.”

More than 58,000 residents were displaced from their homes, according to officials. Many of the injured were being treated in makeshift tents outside overwhelme­d hospitals in Cianjur. Some victims were being transferre­d to nearby regions because of a shortage of medical profession­als, Ridwan said.

More than 22,000 homes were damaged, at least 6,500 of them severely, officials said. In the Cianjur area, 13 schools and 10 office buildings were also hit, according to emergency officials.

Around 2.5 million people live in Cianjur, a fertile area of waterfalls and rivers that gets three crops of rice a year compared with the standard two. The regency, covering an area slightly larger than Rhode Island, sees frequent flooding, volcanic eruptions and other calamities. On Tuesday, next to a road with traffic inching behind excavators trying to reach remote affected areas, a yellow sign warned: “Be careful, prone to landslide.”

At the site of a landslide in the remote area of Cugenang, the side of a mountain looked as if it had been cleanly sliced off. Rescue dogs were sniffing Tuesday afternoon for what officials estimated could be dozens of people still buried under mounds of rust-colored soil.

Resna Darmayana, 48, a fried rice seller and a volunteer at the fire department from the nearby city of Bandung, said rescue workers at the site felt at least four strong aftershock­s, delaying their efforts because they were required by protocol to stop and stay away from the hills when the tremors occur. The area experience­d more than 120 aftershock­s since Monday.

One resident, Uus, 40, had returned home on Monday to fix a leaky roof, leaving his family to manage their roadside eatery during the lunch rush. When the earthquake struck, mud and debris from a nearby hill engulfed the restaurant and several other nearby cafes.

Uus, who also goes by a single name, rushed back to try and save his family. “I screamed out for help,” he said. “I wanted to dig out, but I had no tools.”

“The landslide covered the place. I never thought that hill would collapse,” he added, wiping away tears with a brown sarong around his neck, his feet and the hems of his trousers still muddy from the frantic aftermath of the previous day.

His wife, three children and sister were all killed.

“Oh God, oh God, all of them died, oh God!” he cried, as an official at the hospital delivered the news of his lost family members.

“If I knew that earthquake would come, I would have taken my family home too and not left them in the restaurant. Oh God, you took them all,” Uus said.

 ?? PHOTOS: ADITYA AJI — AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Villagers salvage items from damaged houses following a magnitude 5.6earthquak­e that killed at least 268people, with hundreds injured and others missing in Cianjur, Indonesia, on Monday. “It was very sudden,” a villager said of the disaster.
PHOTOS: ADITYA AJI — AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Villagers salvage items from damaged houses following a magnitude 5.6earthquak­e that killed at least 268people, with hundreds injured and others missing in Cianjur, Indonesia, on Monday. “It was very sudden,” a villager said of the disaster.
 ?? ?? A villager carries his injured daughter to safety Monday. Around 2.5million people live in Cianjur, an area known for its mountains and bountiful rice crops.
A villager carries his injured daughter to safety Monday. Around 2.5million people live in Cianjur, an area known for its mountains and bountiful rice crops.
 ?? KHOLID — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Earthquake survivors are treated outside of a hospital in Cianjur, Indonesia, on Monday following a magnitude 5.6earthquak­e. At least 162people were killed and hundreds more injured officials said.
KHOLID — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Earthquake survivors are treated outside of a hospital in Cianjur, Indonesia, on Monday following a magnitude 5.6earthquak­e. At least 162people were killed and hundreds more injured officials said.

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