New Straits Times

KEEPING VIGIL FOR THE MISSING

Indonesia has officially ended the formal search for remains, but families of victims are still searching for their loved ones, writes

- BEN C. SOLOMON

TWO weeks after the earthquake and tsunami that devastated his neighbourh­ood, Anjas Firmansyah is still desperate to see his wife and son.

Each day, he stands beside the heavy machinery digging deep into the muck and rubble around where his house was swallowed by the earth. Each day, rescue workers pull out bodies. He takes a hard look at each — there have been hundreds by now — half hoping he’ll recognise his 7-yearold boy and 35-year-old wife. So far, nothing.

“I have to believe he got out,” Firmansyah said of his son, standing at the edge of a destroyed minaret in the demolished neighbourh­ood of Balaroa. “He loved the mosque, so I know he’d come here to meet me.”

But time is running out. Last Friday marked the final official day of large-scale operations after the Indonesian government announced that it would end the formal search for remains. Weeks in the tropical heat have turned the concerns from digging out bodies to the health of the rescue workers.

Many rescue workers and heavy equipment will remain for the next month, but the government is already drafting new constructi­on plans.

Officials say they intend to flatten the area that was hardest hit by the liquefacti­on — the phenomenon in which earthquake­s cause the ground to flow and churn — and then pour soil and designate the place a mass grave. Eventually, one official said, it could be a park or soccer field.

“It’s time to move on,” said Haris Karimin, spokesman for the Central Sulawesi government.

That’s hard news for mothers, fathers, daughters, grandparen­ts — hundreds of people like Firmansyah — who gather at the edge of the destructio­n each day, searching for the bodies of loved ones lost after an earthquake and tsunami tore through the city of Palu and the surroundin­g area on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.

More than 2,000 people have been declared dead, and government officials have said that as many as 5,000 are still missing.

For Firmansyah and many Palu residents like him, the digging is all that is left.

One woman, Riana Asnuwari, began pleading with recovery workers after they unearthed her mother’s headscarf and motorbike from the wreckage earlier this week. “All I want is the body!” she told them, distraught.

For Indonesia, mass burials have been a recurring event. In 2004, after a 9.1 magnitude earthquake and massive tsunami devastated Aceh province, the government gathered thousands of bodies into a mass grave in the city of Banda Aceh. It’s now a park and popular tourist destinatio­n. In 2009, when a 7.6 earthquake caused massive landslides that buried entire villages near the city of Padang, they, too, were planted over and declared a memorial.

The Balaroa neighbourh­ood of Palu was among the hardest hit by liquefacti­on in the earthquake on Sept 28. Extracting the bodies has been a monumental task for the authoritie­s and search and rescue workers.

Last week, excavators had dug for hours, sometimes as deep as 40 feet into the mud, and pulled out whatever they could. Mostly it was car parts, torn mattresses, muddied household items — bits of everyday life. But inevitably there would be remains. Sometimes one excavator scoop would pull up five corpses huddled together. Other times, it might be just a finger.

The Palu police hospital was the collection point for hundreds of bodies pulled from the debris. Families and body identifica­tion teams would methodical­ly unzip each bag, searching for familiar clothes, tattoos or marks. The bodies are bloated and stiff from rigor mortis.

On Friday, that part of the search ended too: Any bodies found after that were bound for the mass grave perched on a hillside on the outskirts of town.

What happens next around Palu is still unclear. Over 80,000 people had their homes destroyed. Most live in camps of makeshift plastic tents next to mosques, churches and government buildings.

Officials in the Indonesian capital, Jakarta, have talked about different options for redrawing the maps to build new homes. But where the money will come from, no one yet knows.

For Firmansyah, moving on is not yet an option.

He and his oldest son, Fauzhi, are two of the more than 80,000 who were displaced. They have moved in with Firmansyah’s brother in law. But many are stuck in makeshift tent camps.

For him, the end of the formal search for remains means his chance for answers has closed.

“Either they are dead, and that will be OK, or they are still alive — and that is better,” he said. “But to wait is the hardest pain.”

The Balaroa neighbourh­ood of Palu was among the hardest hit by liquefacti­on in the earthquake on Sept 28. Extracting the bodies has been a monumental task for the authoritie­s and search and rescue workers.

 ?? PIC NYT ?? Anjas Firmansyah looks over where his house used to be after an earthquake and tsunami levelled the area, in Palu, Indonesia, on Oct 11. The Indonesian government has ended the search for bodies.
PIC NYT Anjas Firmansyah looks over where his house used to be after an earthquake and tsunami levelled the area, in Palu, Indonesia, on Oct 11. The Indonesian government has ended the search for bodies.
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