Shanghai Daily

Strong aftershock­s strike Lombok

- (AFP)

THE death toll from a devastatin­g earthquake on the Indonesian island of Lombok jumped to 319 yesterday, as strong aftershock­s triggered panic among traumatize­d survivors waiting for aid in the worst-hit regions.

The shallow magnitude 6.9 quake on Sunday leveled tens of thousands of homes, mosques and businesses across Lombok, with relief agencies only just starting to reach survivors in some of the worst-hit areas four days later.

“Our latest update is that 319 people died,” said Indonesia’s chief security minister Wiranto, adding that rescue efforts were ongoing and complicate­d by aftershock­s.

The number of people forced from their homes in the disaster has soared to 270,000, national disaster agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said, with around 1,000 people severely injured.

Most of the displaced are sleeping under tents or tarpaulins near their ruined homes or in evacuation shelters that are short of food, clean water and medical help. Makeshift medical facilities have been set up to treat the injured.

Survivors of the quake have also been shaken by hundreds of aftershock­s, including a shallow magnitude 5.9 quake yesterday which caused people to flee evacuation shelters crying and screaming. Motorcycle­s parked on the street in north Lombok’s Tanjung district toppled over and the walls of some nearby buildings collapsed.

“We were stuck in the traffic while delivering aid, suddenly it felt like our car was hit from behind, it was so strong,” witness Sri Laksmi said. “People in the street began to panic and got out of their cars, they ran in different directions in the middle of the traffic.”

Twenty-four people were injured by falling debris in the tremor, Nugroho said.

Authoritie­s and internatio­nal relief groups have begun organizing aid, but badly damaged roads have slowed efforts to reach survivors in the mountainou­s north of Lombok, which bore the brunt of the quake.

Aid had begun trickling into some of the most isolated regions by midday yesterday, officials said, but many displaced people still lack basic supplies.

In some parts of north Lombok, survivors can be seen standing on the road with cardboard boxes asking for donations and food.

“It is already clear that Sunday’s earthquake was exceptiona­lly destructiv­e,” Christophe­r Rassi, the head of a Red Cross assessment team on Lombok, said in a statement. “I visited villages yesterday that were completely collapsed.”

Workers with heavy machinery are searching the rubble of homes, schools and mosques, with hope of finding any survivors fading. There are fears that two collapsed mosques in north Lombok had been filled with worshipper­s.

Rescuers have found three bodies and also managed to pull one man alive from the twisted wreckage of one mosque in Lading Lading village, while at least one body has been spotted under the rubble in Pemenang. Authoritie­s are gathering informatio­n from family members with missing relatives to determine how many more people may have been in the buildings when they collapsed, national search and rescue agency spokesman Yusuf Latif said.

Across much of the island, a popular tourist destinatio­n, once-bustling villages have been turned into virtual ghost towns. There is a dire need for medical staff and “long-term aid,” especially food and medicine in the worst-hit areas.

 ??  ?? A young man salvages belongings as he climbs over debris of a collapsed house in Kayangan in north Lombok island in Indonesia yesterday following the Sunday earthquake. Strong aftershock­s struck Lombok yesterday, causing panic among people. — AFP
A young man salvages belongings as he climbs over debris of a collapsed house in Kayangan in north Lombok island in Indonesia yesterday following the Sunday earthquake. Strong aftershock­s struck Lombok yesterday, causing panic among people. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China