Gulf News

Aid rushed as dozens more still trapped

ONE WOMAN FOUND ALIVE IN RUBBLE AS DISASTER AGENCY SAYS MORE HEAVY EQUIPMENT AND PERSONNEL NEEDED TO RECOVER BODIES

- PALU, INDONESIA

One woman found alive in rubble; disaster agency says more heavy equipment and personnel needed to recover bodies |

Indonesian authoritie­s scrambled yesterday to get aid and rescue equipment into quake-hit Sulawesi island and prepared to bury some of the dead, while shaken survivors streamed away from their ruined homes in search of food and shelter.

The confirmed death toll of 844 looked certain to rise as rescuers reached devastated outlying communitie­s hit on Friday by a 7.5 magnitude earthquake and subsequent tsunami waves as high as six metres.

Accounts filtering out of remote areas brought news of devastatio­n, including the deaths of 34 children at a Christian study camp.

Dozens of people were reported to be trapped in the rubble of several hotels and a mall in the small city of Palu, 1,500 kilometres northeast of Jakarta, with hundreds more were feared buried in landslides that engulfed villages.

Recovering bodies

President Joko Widodo told reporters getting those people out was a priority.

“The evacuation is not finished yet, there are many places where the evacuation couldn’t be done because of the absence of heavy equipment, but last night equipment started to arrive,” Widodo said.

“We’ll send as much food supplies as possible today with Hercules planes, directly from Jakarta,” he said, referring to C-130 military transport aircraft.

The disaster agency said later more heavy equipment and personnel were needed to recover bodies.

One woman was recovered alive from ruins overnight in the Palu neighbourh­ood of Balaroa, where houses were swallowed up when the earthquake caused soil liquefacti­on, the national rescue agency said.

Most of the confirmed deaths were in Palu, a city of about 380,000 people, where authoritie­s were preparing a mass grave to bury the dead as soon as they were identified.

However, nearly three days after the quake, the extent of the disaster was not known with authoritie­s bracing for the toll to climb — perhaps into the thousands — as connection­s with remote areas up and down the coast are restored.

Of particular concern is Donggala, a region of 300,000 people north of Palu and close to the epicentre of the quake, and two other districts, which had been cut off from communicat­ions.

The four districts have a combined population of about 1.4 million.

Lack of food and medicine

Aid worker Lian Gogali, who had reached Donggala district by motorcycle, said hundreds of people facing a lack of food and medicine were trying to get out but evacuation teams had yet to arrive and roads were blocked.

“It’s devastatin­g,” she told Reuters by text.

Indonesian Red Cross spokeswoma­n Aulia Arriani said the situation in another of the affected districts, Sigi, was dire. “My volunteers found 34 bodies buried under tsunami debris ... missing children who had been doing a bible camp,” she said.

Sulawesi is one of the earthquake-prone archipelag­o nation’s five main islands and sits astride fault lines. Numerous aftershock­s have rattled the region.

 ?? AFP ?? A soldier carries an elderly woman evacuated from Palu, at the Hasanuddin Airport in Makassar, South Sulawesi.
AFP A soldier carries an elderly woman evacuated from Palu, at the Hasanuddin Airport in Makassar, South Sulawesi.

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