More than 100 dead, scores injured as quake shakes Indonesia’s Java island
A shallow 5.6-magnitude earthquake killed more than 100 people and injured hundreds when it damaged buildings and triggered landslides on Indonesia’s main island of Java on Monday, officials said.
The afternoon quake was centerd in the Cianjur region of West Java, according to the United States Geological Survey, and was felt as far away as the capital Jakarta, where panicked residents ran into the streets.
“Victims kept coming from many areas. Around 700 people were injured,” Herman Suherman, head of Cianjur’s local administration, told broadcaster Kompas TV.
The majority of deaths were counted in one hospital, he said earlier, with most of the victims killed in the ruins of collapsed buildings.
He said the town’s Sayang
Hospital had no power after the quake, leaving doctors unable to operate on victims.
Locals rushed victims to the hospital on pickup trucks and 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.
Suherman said electricity was still down and authorities also needed more health workers due to the overwhelming number of patients.
Thousands of houses could have been damaged in the quake, Adam, a spokesperson for the administration who, like many Indonesians, goes by one name, told AFP.
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.
Relatives of victims congregated at the hospital. Suherman warned the death toll could rise because villagers outside the town may still be trapped.
“We are currently handling people who are in an emergency state in this hospital. The ambulances keep on coming from the villages to the hospital,” he said.
“There are many families in villages that have not been evacuated.”