Gulf Today

7.5 quake hits central Indonesia

One killed; tsunami slams into Palu city on Sulawesi island with officials saying the tremor has levelled ‘many’ buildings and inundating a large mosque

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Makassar: a powerful earthquake hit central Indonesia on Friday, causing a tsunami that slammed into a city on Sulawesi island with oficials saying the tremor had levelled “many” buildings.

The shallow 7.5 magnitude quake sparked terror among locals who led into the streets and raced to higher ground fearing tsunami waves.

The disaster agency briely issued a tsunami warning before lifting it.

But dramatic video footage ilmed from the top loor of a parking ramp spiral in Palu, a city of 350,000 nearly 80kmfrom the quake’s epicentre, showed a churning wall of whitewater mow down several buildings and inundate a large mosque.

Rahmat Triyono, head of the agency’s earthquake and tsunami division, later conirmed the city was struck by a freak wave.

People living hundreds of kilometres from the epicentre reported feeling the massive shake, hours after a smaller jolt killed at least one person in the same part of the Southeast Asian archipelag­o.

There were no immediate reports of deaths or injuries after the latest tremor, but it was a higher magnitude than a series of quakes that killed hundreds on the island of Lombok this summer.

The quake hit just off central Sulawesi at a shallow depth of some 10km just before 6:00pm local time (1100 GMT), the US Geological Survey said.

“There are reports that many buildings collapsed in the earthquake,” national disaster agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said in a statement.

“Residents panicked and scattered out of their homes.”

Picturessu­ppliedbyth­eagencysho­wed a badly damaged shopping mall in Palu where at least one loor had collapsed onto the storey below.

Other pictures showed major damage to buildings, with rubble strewn about the road and large cracks running through pavements.

Facebook Live video showed long trafic jams formed in some parts of the region as terriied residents packed into cars, trucks and motorbikes to lee to higher ground following the tsunami warning.

Search and rescue teams have been dispatched­tohard-hitareas,nugrohosai­d.

AFP phone calls to several regional hospitals went unanswered and Palu’s main airport was closed around 7.30pm local time, with authoritie­s saying it would not open for 24 hours.

Friday’s tremor was centred 78km north of Palu, the capital of Central Sulawesi province, but was felt in the far south of the island in its largest city Makassar and on the neighbouri­ng island of Kalimantan, Indonesia’s portion of Borneo island.

The initial tremor struck as evening prayers were about to begin in the world’s biggest Muslim majority country on the holiest day of the week when mosques would be especially busy.

It was followed by a series of powerful aftershock­s, including one measuring 5.7 magnitude.

“I was about to start prayers but then I heard people shouting ‘earthquake! earthquake!’ so I stopped,” Andi Temmaeli from Wajo, south of Palu, said.

Lisa Soba Palloan, a resident of Toraja, also south of Palu, said locals felt several quakes Friday.

“The last one was quite big,” she said. “Everyone was getting out their homes, shouting in fear.”

Quakes of similar magnitude can cause great damage to poorly built or designed structures, including the toppling of chimneys, columns and walls, according to USGS.

Indonesia is one of the most disasterpr­one nations on earth.

It lies on the Paciic “Ring of Fire”, where tectonic plates collide and many of the world’s volcanic eruptions and earthquake­s occur.

 ?? Associated Press ?? A house damaged by an earthquake is seen in Donggala, Sulawesi, on Friday.
Associated Press A house damaged by an earthquake is seen in Donggala, Sulawesi, on Friday.

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