Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Indonesia hunts for quake survivors

Rescuers are racing against time to find survivors under the rubble

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CIANJUR, Indonesia (AFP) — Rescuers searched for survivors buried under rubble on Tuesday after an earthquake on Indonesia’s main island of Java killed 162 people, injured hundreds and left more feared trapped in collapsed buildings.

As bodybags emerged from crumpled buildings in Indonesia’s most populous province, rescue efforts turned to any survivors still under debris in areas made hard to reach by the mass of obstacles thrown onto the roads by the quake.

The epicenter of the shallow 5.6-magnitude quake on Monday was near the town of Cianjur in West Java where most of the victims were killed as buildings collapsed and landslides were triggered.

One of the dozens of rescuers, 34-year-old Dimas Reviansyah, said teams were using chainsaws and excavators to break through piles of felled trees and debris to reach areas where civilians were believed trapped.

President Joko Widodo visited the area on Tuesday, offering compensati­on for victims and ordering disaster and rescue agencies to “mobilize their personnel” to prioritize the evacuation of victims.

Most of the victims were killed as buildings collapsed.

“On behalf of myself, on behalf of the government, I would like to express my deepest condolence­s,” he said.

Indonesia’s national disaster mitigation agency, or BNPB, said at least 25 people were still buried under the rubble in Cianjur as darkness fell Monday.

“There’s a possibilit­y there are still more victims,” Rudy Saladin, a local military chief, told AFP.

The BNPB offered a lower death toll of 103 as of Tuesday morning and said 31 people remain missing.

Some of the dead were students at an Islamic boarding school while others were killed in their homes when roofs and walls caved in on them.

The search operation on Tuesday was made more challengin­g because of severed road links and power outages in parts of the largely rural, mountainou­s region.

By Tuesday morning, 89 percent of power to Cianjur had been restored by state-owned electricit­y company PLN, according to state news agency Antara.

Kamil said more than 300 people had been injured and over 13,000 taken to evacuation centers.

Those who survived camped outside in near-total darkness surrounded by fallen debris, shattered glass and chunks of concrete.

Doctors treated patients outdoors at makeshift wards after the quake, which was felt as far away as the capital Jakarta.

Grieving relatives waited for authoritie­s to release bodies from morgues to bury their loved ones in accordance with their Islamic faith.

One father carried his dead son wrapped in white cloth through the streets of his village near Cianjur.

Others searched for their missing relatives in the chaos.

At a shelter in Ciherang village near Cianjur, evacuees sat on tarpaulins stretched over the cold morning ground.

 ?? ADITYA AJI/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? VILLAGERS salvage items from damaged houses following a 5.6-magnitude earthquake that killed at least 162 people, with hundreds injured and others missing in Cianjur on 22 November 2022.
ADITYA AJI/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE VILLAGERS salvage items from damaged houses following a 5.6-magnitude earthquake that killed at least 162 people, with hundreds injured and others missing in Cianjur on 22 November 2022.

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