The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Indonesia says to end search for victims Thursday

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PALU, Indonesia: Indonesian rescue workers will stop searching for the bodies of victims of an earthquake and tsunami on the island of Sulawesi on Thursday, the national disaster mitigation agency said yesterday.

The announceme­nt came after the official death toll from the 7.5 magnitude quake and a tsunami it triggered on Sept. 28 rose to 1,763.

Bodies are still being recovered, especially from the ruins of buildings in the small city of Palu and from neighbourh­oods hit by liquefacti­on, a phenomenon that turns the ground into a roiling quagmire, in the south of city.

“Evacuation stops on October 11,” the national disaster mitigation agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho told a news briefing, using an Indonesian word that applies to the search and retrieval of both living and dead people.

“Victims who have not been found are declared missing,” he said. Some limited searching might still be undertaken but large-scale searches with many personnel and heavy equipment would cease, he said.

Many hundreds of people are still buried in mud and debris in the south of Palu, where neighbourh­oods were obliterate­d by liquefacti­on and desperate relatives have been seeking help to find loved ones.

Dozens of rescuers removed 34 bodies from one place on Saturday.

Nugroho said the debris would be removed from those places and they would be turned into public spaces like parks and sports venues. Surveys would be carried out and people living in areas vulnerable to liquefacti­on would be moved.

“We don’t want the community to be relocated to such dangerous places,” he said.

Most of the dead have been found in Palu, the region’s main urban centre.

Figures for more remote areas, some just re-connected to the outside world by road, are trickling in. The heaviest casualties appear to have been in Palu.

One grieving father appeared resigned to the fact the search for victims will end within days.

“What’s the point anyway? At this stage they are not even recognisab­le,” said Ondre, 38, who makes toys for a living.

His wife and two daughters were swept away in the tsunami that hit Palu’s seafront shortly after the earthquake.

He found the bodies of his wife and older daughter but is still looking for his younger daughter, aged two.

Speaking by a mass grave atop a hill overlookin­g Palu’s bay as the sun began to set, Ondre said he had come to offer prayers for his little daughter.

“I don’t want her to feel like her father never tried to find her. My soul wouldn’t rest,” he said.

Sulawesi is one of Indonesia’s five main islands and, like the others, is exposed to frequent earthquake­s and tsunamis.

In 2004, a quake off Sumatra island triggered a tsunami across the Indian Ocean that killed 226,000 people in 13 countries, including more than 120,000 in Indonesia.

Earlier on Sunday, dozens of Christians gathered outside ruined churches for open-air services to give thanks for their survival and to mourn members of their congregati­on killed in the disaster.

Indonesia has the world’s biggest Muslim population but there are Christian communitie­s throughout the archipelag­o, including in Palu.

“We are so relieved to be alive but sad because so many of our congregati­on died,” said Dewi Febriani, a 26-yearold economics student, after a service in a tent set up outside the Toraja Church in Jono Oge village, just south of Palu.

Jono Oge was particular­ly hard hit by liquefacti­on.

Dozens of teenagers at a nearby church and Bible camp were killed. Many of their bodies lie buried in the mud.

A big aid operation is gearing up to help hard-hit communitie­s where some 70,000 people have been displaced.

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