The Star Malaysia

Hunt for survivors as tsunami death toll climbs higher

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CARITA ( Indonesia): Dozens of filled body bags were hauled away from buildings flattened by Indonesia’s volcano-triggered tsunami as the death toll climbed to 373 and search teams pushed on with the grim hunt for corpses.

Rescue teams used their bare hands, diggers and other heavy equipment to haul debris from the stricken area around the Sunda Strait, as thousands were evacuated to higher ground.

Experts warned that more deadly waves could slam the devastated region after Saturday night’s disaster, as questions swirled over why the killer wave caught a disaster-prone country’s monitors completely off guard.

The powerful tsunami swept over popular beaches on southern Sumatra and western Java and inundated tourist hotels and coastal settlement­s.

Some 1,459 people were injured with another 128 missing, disaster agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said, giving an updated toll late yesterday.

Hundreds of buildings were destroyed by the wave that left a tangled mess of corrugated steel roofing, timber and rubble at Carita beach, a popular spot for day-trippers on the west coast of Java.

Beachside cottages at one resort were flattened while the dining room’s mud-caked floor was strewn with smashed chairs and tables, utensils and spilled cups of ice cream.

In the lobby, a Christmas tree remained standing, surrounded by fallen holiday ornaments and toppled-over flower pots.

“The military and police are searching the ruins to see if we can find more victims,” said Dody Ruswandi, a senior official at the disaster agency, adding that the rescue effort was likely to last a week.

It was the third major natural

disaster to strike Indonesia in the space of six months, following a series of powerful earthquake­s on the island of Lombok in July and August and a quake-tsunami in September that killed around 2,200 people in Palu on Sulawesi island, with thousands more missing and presumed dead.

It also came less than a week before the 14th anniversar­y of the 2004 Boxing Day tsunami, one of the deadliest disasters in history that killed some 220,000 people in countries around the Indian Ocean, including some 168,000 Indonesian­s.

In devastated Sukarame village, Sunarti waded through knee-deep water as she searched for belongings outside her destroyed house – and waited for aid to arrive.

“There’s been no help at all so far,” the 61-year-old said from the flattened hamlet.

“Some people are starving.” Survivor Ade Junaedi recounted seeing nature’s fury firsthand.

“It happened very quickly. I was

chatting with a guest at our place when my wife opened the door and she suddenly screamed in panic.

“I thought there was a fire, but when I walked to the door I saw the water coming.”

Richard Teeuw, a geohazard

expert from the University of Portsmouth in England, said the eruption and landslide may well have destabilis­ed the volcano, heightenin­g the risk of another tsunami.

“The likelihood of further tsuna- mis in the Sunda Strait will remain high while Anak Krakatau volcano is going through its current active phase because that might trigger further submarine landslides,” Teeuw said.

Dramatic video posted on social media showed a wall of water suddenly crashing into a concert by pop group “Seventeen” – hurling band members off the stage and then flooding into the audience.

At least two band members were killed along with its manager and a crew member, while Indonesian media said the band’s missing drummer was found dead yesterday.

The surviving lead singer’s wife is missing. Front man Riefian Fajarsyah posted a picture online of he and his wife kissing in Paris with the Eiffel Tower in the background.

“Today is your birthday – I want wish you a happy birthday in person. Come home soon, honey,” he wrote in the caption of the photo, which was posted on Sunday.

 ?? — Reuters — Reuters — AP ?? Grim task: Rescue workers carrying a body bag at the beach front hotel in Pandeglang in Banten province. Devastated: A survivor sitting on a piece of debris as she salvages items from her flattened house in Sumur. Making do: Residents resting at a government building after they were evacuated in Lampung.
— Reuters — Reuters — AP Grim task: Rescue workers carrying a body bag at the beach front hotel in Pandeglang in Banten province. Devastated: A survivor sitting on a piece of debris as she salvages items from her flattened house in Sumur. Making do: Residents resting at a government building after they were evacuated in Lampung.

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