The Oklahoman

Indonesia: Avoid coast near volcano

- BY NINIEK KARMINI

CARITA BEACH, INDONESIA — Indonesian authoritie­s urged people to avoid the coast in areas where a tsunami killed at least 430 people over the weekend in a fresh warning issued on the anniversar­y of the catastroph­ic 2004 Asian earthquake and tsunami.

The big waves that followed an eruption on a volcanic island hit communitie­s along the Sunda Strait on Saturday night. The eruption of Anak Krakatau, or “Child of Krakatoa,” is believed to have set off a large landslide on the volcano, apparently on its slope and underwater, displacing water that slammed into Java and Sumatra islands.

Indonesia’s Meteorolog­y, Geophysics and Climatolog­y Agency asked people late Tuesday to stay at least 1,640 feet and up to less than a mile from the coastline along the strait, which lies between the two islands.

The agency was monitoring Anak Krakatau’s eruptions as stormy weather and high surf continued to plague the area, said agency head Dwikorita Karnawati.

“All these conditions could potentiall­y cause landslides at the cliffs of the crater into the sea, and we fear that that could trigger a tsunami,” Karnawati said at a news conference. She asked that communitie­s remain vigilant and not to panic.

The warning was reiterated by the country’s disaster agency on Wednesday.

The tsunami struck without warning, taking people by surprise even in a country familiar with seismic disaster. No big earthquake shook the ground beforehand, and it hit at night on a holiday weekend while people were enjoying concerts and other beach and resort activities.

It was a sharp contrast to the disaster that struck 14 years ago off the northweste­rn tip of Sumatra island. An enormous magnitude 9.1 earthquake rocked the area the morning after Christmas, creating gigantic waves that surged far inland and swallowed everything in their path. The wall of water killed some 230,000 people in a dozen countries, more than half in Indonesia’s Aceh province.

The devastatio­n was vast, and the disaster was among the worst in recent history. Saturday’s event, coupled with an earthquake and tsunami in September on Indonesia’s Sulawesi island that killed at least 2,100 people, triggered flashbacks for some who survived the 2004 tragedy.

“When it happens, I always remember what we have been through,” said Qurnaty, 54, who lost her home and several family members to the 2004 waves in the hardhit provincial capital of Banda Aceh.

Qurnaty, who like many Indonesian­s uses only one name, prayed with surviving family members at a mass grave there on Wednesday’s anniversar­y. “Every time I see them (on TV), I feel really, really sad. All we can do from here is to pray for them,” she said.

 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? An Indonesian soldier walks near debris Wednesday at a tsunami-ravaged area in Carita, Indonesia.
[AP PHOTO] An Indonesian soldier walks near debris Wednesday at a tsunami-ravaged area in Carita, Indonesia.

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