National Post

‘MAYHEM ... SHAKING’

- AlAnnA RizzA

LOMBOK, INDONESIA •What was supposed to be a bucket-list family trip after her daughter was diagnosed with brain cancer, turned into a harrowing tale of survival mode as a powerful earthquake hit Indonesia leaving the family stuck on a popular tourist island, said a British Columbia woman.

Jennifer Montgomery-Lay, of Maple Ridge, B.C., said that she, her husband, 14-year-old son and 21-year-old daughter are stuck in Lombok after a powerful 7.0-magnitude earthquake hit on Sunday evening.

“I was in sheer panic, we all were,” Montgomery-Lay, 41, said on Monday from her hotel, adding that she and her family were not injured in the quake.

“We cried. It was all very stressful. But to see the aftermath today is heart breaking (as) 16 hotel staff have lost their homes.”

The earthquake, which was also felt in the neighbouri­ng island of Bali, flattened houses, caused bridges to collapse and killed at least 98 people. National Disaster Mitigation Agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho told The Associated Press that the damage was “massive” in northern Lombok, where the quake was centred, and that more than half the homes were destroyed or severely damaged.

Nugroho said the death toll will increase and that more than 230 people were seriously injured. This was the second deadly quake in a week to strike Lombok. On July 29, a another quake left 16 people dead.

Damage was “massive” in mountainou­s northern Lombok, where the quake was centred, said National Disaster Mitigation Agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho. In several districts, more than half the homes were destroyed or severely damaged.

A large mosque collapsed on worshipper­s in northern Lombok’s Lading-Lading village, and rescuers used a backhoe to search the debris. The number of victims was unknown.

Some areas still hadn’t been reached 24 hours after the quake because of collapsed bridges, blocked and ruptured roads and the loss of power and communicat­ions.

Nugroho said the death toll had risen to 98 and warned it will continue to increase. All but two of were killed on Lombok; the others died on Bali.

Sahril, who uses one name, said he escaped his collapsing house in North Lombok with his immediate family, but his older brother is buried in his flattened home in the village of Cubek.

“He was serving customers when the earthquake happened. The customers managed to escape, but he himself didn’t,” Sahril said. “His two-storey house collapsed and buried him. He had no chance to scream (for) help.”

The quake struck at a shallow depth of 10.5 kilometres. Shallow quakes tend to cause more damage than deeper ones.

“We were sitting there having dinner at about 7 o’clock last night, we just felt a really big sort of shaking and the lights went off and everyone just ran,” Australian tourist Kim Liebelt said as he waited with other travellers for a flight out at Lombok’s internatio­nal airport.

“And then the roof started falling down on us, rocks and rubble and then just everyone running to get away,” he said.

Videos showed screaming people running in panic from a shopping mall and a neighbourh­ood in Bali where parked vehicles swayed. On Lombok, soldiers and other rescuers carried the injured on stretchers and carpets. Many were treated outdoors because hospitals were damaged.

Montgomery-Lay said she and her family have travelled to more than 20 countries after her daughter was diagnosed with brain cancer in 2005 and she’s been battling it ever since. Montgomery-Lay started a blog titled “Life All Over the Map” to document her daughter’s treatment and the family’s travels.

“We live in uncertaint­y every single day, but we also know how lucky we are to be granted borrowed time and we don’t want to waste one single second,” wrote Montgomery-Lay on the blog’s home page.

Montgomery-Lay said the family has been vacationin­g in Indonesia for about a month, and that they were in Bali during last week’s quake and they felt the ground shaking. On Sunday evening, the family had just gotten back to their hotel after dinner and Montgomery­Lay said she was about to organize her daughter’s medication when the family experience­d the powerful earthquake.

“(It) was mayhem,” she said. “Shaking. Parts of the building crumbling. Glass shattering. It started slow but amped up very quickly.”

Montgomery-Lay said parts of the hotel crumbled and glass from a balcony fell on a woman who was swimming in the hotel’s pool, cutting her leg. She said the power went out and her daughter couldn’t use one of her medication pumps, but the family is doing OK and a generator brought the power back on. She said the hotel occupants have now been moved to a holding room in the building.

The quake also triggered a tsunami warning. Montgomery-Lay said her hotel is on higher ground so the meeting place when the warning was issued was by the building’s main gate. The warning was lifted after only small waves were recorded.

“There are only a few tourists left here. Our family and maybe 10 others,” she said. “We just want to get off Lombok.”

Montgomery-Lay said she was in touch with the Canadian Consulate, but she was told there was nothing they could do at that point.

“There are no flights and the airport looks like mayhem,” she said.

There are 2,221 Canadian registrant­s abroad in Indonesia and 480 registered in Bali, said Elizabeth Reid, spokeswoma­n for Global Affairs Canada. She said as of Monday afternoon, the agency has no indication of Canadians being killed or injured in the earthquake.

“Canada stands with the people of Indonesia during this difficult time. Global Affairs Canada is in contact with Canadians in the affected area and stands ready to provide consular assistance as required,” said Reid in an email.

“We encourage Canadians in Indonesia to contact their family and friends. We are in contact with local authoritie­s and stand ready to provide consular assistance to Canadian citizens if needed.”

On Gili Trawangan, one of three popular vacation islands near Lombok, thousands of tourists and local residents spent the night on a hill fearing a tsunami. Nugroho said authoritie­s had deployed three ships to evacuate people who were packed on the 16-squarekilo­metre beach.

By Monday morning, with electricit­y off and hotels and hostels damaged, thousands were desperate to leave.

The Bali and Lombok airports have remained open.

Montgomery-Lay said her family hasn’t gone to the airport to try to get on a flight for fear of being stuck in the heat with her daughter’s health condition. But she said the family is going to try to get on a ferry to Bali on Tuesday and that their flight back to B.C. is on Aug. 13.

“We think we may attempt that tomorrow, but since we are now evacuated, we don’t know.”

THE ROOF STARTED FALLING DOWN ON US, ROCKS AND RUBBLE.

 ?? AKBP. DEWA WIJAYA, WEST NUSA TENGGARA MARINE POLICE / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tourists line up on a beach as they wait to be evacuated Monday from Gili Trawangan, one of three popular vacation islands near Lombok Island in Indonesia, where a powerful earthquake struck Sunday evening. At least 98 people were killed and hundreds injured. The death toll is expected to rise. On July 29, another area quake left 16 dead.
AKBP. DEWA WIJAYA, WEST NUSA TENGGARA MARINE POLICE / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tourists line up on a beach as they wait to be evacuated Monday from Gili Trawangan, one of three popular vacation islands near Lombok Island in Indonesia, where a powerful earthquake struck Sunday evening. At least 98 people were killed and hundreds injured. The death toll is expected to rise. On July 29, another area quake left 16 dead.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada