Bangkok Post

Rescuers check remote islands following earthquake

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PADANG: A ship carrying military personnel and search and rescue officials was dispatched yesterday to check on remote island communitie­s in western Indonesia a day after a powerful earthquake, as strong aftershock­s rattled the region.

The 7.8 magnitude, shallow undersea quake hit late Wednesday off Sumatra, Indonesia’s main western island, sending panicked residents fleeing for the hills and briefly triggering a tsunami alert.

Sumatra is regularly hit by natural disasters, with the worst in recent memory the 2004 quake-triggered tsunami, which engulfed the northern tip of the island and killed more than 200,000 people in Indonesia and in countries around the Indian Ocean.

But Wednesday’s tsunami alert was lifted after several hours and life was returning to normal in Sumatra’s major cities, with no reports so far of casualties or major damage to buildings. However the national search and rescue agency said a ship carrying a team had been dispatched to Tuapejat in the Mentawai Islands, off Sumatra’s west coast, to check on isolated communitie­s. The islands were the closest land to the quake’s epicentre.

Phone contact had not been properly establishe­d with Tuapejat since the quake, the agency said, but added this was not unusual in the remote islands.

“The team will head there to check the situation,” the agency’s West Sumatra division said in a statement, adding that residents were still believed to be sheltering in the hills.

The Mentawai Islands are poor and isolated, although they are a popular destinatio­n with some intrepid foreign tourists, particular­ly surfers.

The small archipelag­o is regularly hit by quakes, and hundreds were killed in the islands by a tsunami in 2010. Indonesia sits on the Pacific “Ring of Fire”, where the meeting of continenta­l plates causes strong seismic activity.

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