Gulf Today

TSUNAMI LEAVES PATH OF DEATH IN INDONESIA

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THE TSUNAMI WAS TRIGGERED BY A STRONG QUAKE THAT BROUGHT DOWN BUILDINGS AND SENT LOCALS FLEEING FOR HIGHER GROUND AS A CHURNING WALL OF WATER CRASHED INTO PALU, WHERE THERE WERE WIDESPREAD POWER BLACKOUTS; HOSPITALS WERE OVERWHELME­D BY THE INFLUX OF INJURED, WITH MANY PEOPLE BEING TREATED IN THE OPEN

JAKARTA: The sun had just slipped behind the mountains, leaving a soft pink glow as the blue sea melted into the darkening horizon. It could have been a postcard from a tropical paradise, except for the long white wave stretching the width of the bay — getting larger and closer with each passing second.

By the time the fast-moving wall of frothing water slammed into the city of Palu off Indonesia’s Sulawesi island on Friday, it was 3 metres high.

TRAGIC VIEW

The tsunami, triggered by a magnitude 7.5 earthquake, destroyed the idyllic scene in seconds, leaving hundreds dead. A video clip widely broadcast on Indonesian TV showed water swallowing an entire row of buildings and gushing into streets as onlookers ran shrieking in terror. Photos showed twisted tin and wood splinters loating in the coffee-colored torrent alongside cars and motorbikes that had been tossed like toys. A shopping mall was reduced to rubble.

There were also concerns over the whereabout­s of hundreds of people preparing for a beach festival that had been due to start on Friday evening, the disaster agency said.

Hospitals were overwhelme­d by the inlux of injured, with many people being treated in the open air, while other survivors helped to retrieve the remains of those who died.

One man was seen carrying the muddy corpse of a small child.

The tsunami was triggered by a strong quake that brought down buildings and sent locals leeing for higher ground as a churning wall of water crashed into Palu, where there were widespread power blackouts.

Images on saturday also showed bodies draped in crude blue tarps on roads near the beach, while others were laid out in rows on concrete foundation­s.

MORE DANGEROUS

Experts said the long, narrow bay running into Palu, a city of 380,000, squeezed the tsunami into a tight space, likely making the waves more dangerous.

“Because of the bay, all the water comes there and collects together. And then it makes it higher,” said Nazli Ismail, a geophysici­st at the University of Syiah Kuala in Banda Aceh on Indonesia’s Sumatra island, where a magnitude 9.1 earthquake spawned a tsunami in 2004, killing 230,000 people in a dozen countries.

Disaster agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo said the waves reached as high as 6 metres in at least one area, according to a report relayed by a man who called to say he survived only by climbing and clinging to a tree. The cities of Donggala and Mamuju were also hit, but they had not yet been reached. Roads were impassable, cut off by debris and landslides, and communicat­ions were nearly impossible.

“We need heavy equipment for this evacuation process,” Nugroho said. “We also need to double up our rescue team personnel.”

Hospitals in Palu were swamped with patients lying on the ground hooked to drips. They were being treated outdoors due to continuing strong after shocks. many residents in the area were also sleeping outside, too afraid to return indoors.

A massive yellow suspension bridge crossing an estuary feeding into the bay was toppled — either by the earthquake or tsunami — and left lying on its side in the water.

Ismail said he was surprised that a tsunami was generated off the coast of central Sulawesi, which sits on a strike-slip fault, producing earthquake­s that typically move in a horizontal motion and do not usually displace large amounts of water.

In contrast, temblors occurring where one tectonic plate is lodged beneath another — called subduction zones — can move large amounts of water vertically when the strain forces one plate to pop up or dive down. The force can create devastatin­g tsunamis like the one in Sumatra and off Japan’s northeast coast in 2011.

But Danny Hilman Natawidjaj­a, a geologist with the Indonesian Institute of Sciences, said the Sulawesi event is more complicate­d. While it occurred on a strike-slip fault, he said the part that ruptured was on a small segment that can move in a vertical motion. He said that could have triggered the tsunami, which also could have been created by an underwater landslide.

Indonesia, a vast archipelag­o of more than 17,000 islands, is prone to earthquake­s because of its location on the “Ring of Fire,” an arc of volcanoes and fault lines in the Pacific Basin.

 ??  ?? SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2018
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2018
 ??  ?? A damaged house is seen after an earthquake hit Palu. Associated Press / AFP
A damaged house is seen after an earthquake hit Palu. Associated Press / AFP
 ??  ?? Residents salvage belongings in Palu.
Residents salvage belongings in Palu.
 ??  ?? Residents gather to look at a collapsed building after an earthquake and tsunami hit Palu, Sulawesi island, on Saturday.
Residents gather to look at a collapsed building after an earthquake and tsunami hit Palu, Sulawesi island, on Saturday.
 ??  ?? Residents carry a bag containing the body of a tsunami victim in Palu.
Residents carry a bag containing the body of a tsunami victim in Palu.
 ??  ?? Residents carry a victim after an earthquake and a tsunami hit Palu.
Residents carry a victim after an earthquake and a tsunami hit Palu.

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