New Straits Times

FOREIGN AID FOR SULAWESI PICKS UP

20 countries offering help, says Indonesia

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INTERNATIO­NAL efforts to help survivors of Indonesia’s devastatin­g earthquake and tsunami gathered pace yesterday as concern grew for hundreds of thousands with little food and water, six days after disaster struck.

Desperate residents on the west coast of Sulawesi island were scavenging for food in farms and orchards as the government struggled to overcome shortages of water, food, shelter and fuel in a disaster zone with no power and degraded communicat­ions.

Chaos has loomed at times with angry people in the region’s main city here, 1,500km northeast of Jakarta, looting shops and thronging its small airport, scrambling for any flight out.

The official death toll from last Friday’s 7.5-magnitude quake has risen to 1,407, many killed by tsunami waves and landslides it triggered. Officials say the toll will rise.

Most of the confirmed dead have come from here and losses in remote areas remain unknown. Communicat­ions are down and bridges and roads have been destroyed or blocked by slips.

But internatio­nal efforts to help are gearing up, after the government overcame a traditiona­l reluctance to take foreign aid.

“The government of Indonesia is experience­d and well-equipped in managing natural disasters, but sometimes, as with all other countries, outside help is also needed,” United Nations UnderSecre­tary-General for Humanitari­an Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinato­r Mark Lowcock said in a statement.

He announced an allocation of US$15 million (RM62 million).

The Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said it was appealing for 22 million Swiss francs (RM91 million) to help Indonesia.

The United States had provided initial funding, deployed government disaster experts and was working to determine what other help could be given, the State Department said.

Some aid from Britain and Australia was also due to arrive yesterday.

About 20 countries have offered help, Indonesia has said.

In Palu, some shops and banks reopened yesterday and a major mobile phone network was back into operation. A sense of calm seemed to be returning with orderly queues at petrol stations after the arrival of fuel shipments.

Indonesian Central Bank Governor Perry Warjiyo played down the overall impact on Southeast Asia’s biggest economy of the disaster in Sulawesi, and of earlier deadly quakes on the tourist island of Lombok.

“This is really a challengin­g and difficult time for Indonesia and for all of us, but we are united and we stand strong and we are confident to withstand this difficult time,” he told a briefing of the Jakarta Foreign Correspond­ents Club on Wednesday evening.

Bank Indonesia was helping to restore payment systems and some cash machines were working again here as banks reopened, he said.

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 ?? AFP PIC ?? A couple making their way past a damaged mosque in Palu in Central Sulawesi yesterday.
AFP PIC A couple making their way past a damaged mosque in Palu in Central Sulawesi yesterday.
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