Muscat Daily

Shallow earthquake kills 162 in Indonesia

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Cianjur, Indonesia - A shallow 5.6-magnitude earthquake killed at least 162 people, with hundreds injured and others missing, when it toppled buildings and triggered landslides on Indonesia’s main island of Java on Monday, officials said.

Doctors treated patients outdoors after the quake, which was felt as far away as the capital Jakarta, left hospitals in the West Java town of Cianjur without power for several hours.

Indonesia’s disaster mitigation agency said 25 people remained trapped under the rubble

as the rescue mission stretched into the night.

The agency increased the death toll from 56 and said more than 2,000 houses were damaged and more than 5,000 people were taken to evacuation centres.

“You can see it yourself, some got their heads, feet sewn outdoors. Some got stressed and

started crying,” West Java governor Ridwan Kamil told a news conference broadcast on Kompas TV.

Kamil said power had been partially restored by the evening, without specifying if that meant by generators or connection to a power grid.

The afternoon quake was centred in the Cianjur region and local authoritie­s said as many as 700 had been wounded, warning the death toll could rise further.

“Because there are still a lot of people trapped on the scene, we assume injuries and fatalities will increase over time,” Kamil said as ambulance sirens blared in the background.

Agus Azhari, 19, was with his elderly mother in the family home when the living room was destroyed within seconds, parts of the walls and roof collapsing around them.

“I pulled my mother’s hand, and we ran outside,” he said. “I heard people screaming for help from all around me,” Azhari told AFP.

The majority of deaths were

counted in one hospital, the head

of Cianjur’s local administra­tion Herman Suherman said earlier, with most of the victims killed in the ruins of collapsed buildings.

He told Indonesian media the

town’s Sayang hospital had no power after the quake, leaving doctors unable to operate on victims immediatel­y.

More health workers were urgently needed due to the over

whelming number of patients, he said.

Locals rushed victims to the hospital in pickup trucks and on motorbikes, according to footage

obtained by AFP.

They were placed in front of the facility as residents spread a tarpaulin on the road for the bodies.

At another facility, Cimacan hospital, green tents were

erected outside for makeshift treatment, according to an AFP reporter at the scene. Victims arrived covered in blood, while parents looked for their children.

Kamil, the governor, said multiple landslides had cut off road access to some areas and bulldozers were being used to reopen them.

Shops, a hospital and an Islamic boarding school in the town were severely damaged, according to Indonesian media.

Broadcaste­rs showed several buildings in Cianjur with their roofs collapsed and debris lining the streets. The town is situated in a hilly area where many houses are built with a mixture of mud and concrete.

“The ambulances keep on coming from the villages to the hospital,” Suherman said. “There are many families in villages that have not been evacuated.”

Cianjur police chief Doni Hermawan told Metro TV authoritie­s had rescued a woman and a baby from a landslide but a third

person they found had died of their injuries.

French President Emmanuel Macron was the first world leader to offer his condolence­s.

“Indonesia was hit this morning by an earthquake of destructiv­e and deadly force. Thoughts for all the victims,” he wrote. Indonesian President Joko Widodo is yet to respond to the quake.

Indonesia’s meteorolog­ical agency said it recorded 62 after

shocks in Cianjur after the quake, with magnitudes ranging from

1.8 to 4. There were no reports of casualties or major damage in Jakarta, a three-hour drive away.

Indonesia experience­s frequent seismic and volcanic activity due to its position on the Pacific ‘Ring of Fire’, where tec

tonic plates collide.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Wounded people rest under a tent displayed outside a hospital following an earthquake in Cianjur on Monday
(AFP) Wounded people rest under a tent displayed outside a hospital following an earthquake in Cianjur on Monday

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